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Xinjiang: China's Muslim Borderland

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Language
  
English

Genre
  
non-fiction

Originally published
  
2004

Publisher
  
Routledge

OCLC
  
52295324

3.8/5
Goodreads

Subject
  
Xinjiang, Islam

Pages
  
528

Page count
  
528

Editor
  
S. Frederick Starr

Xinjiang: China's Muslim Borderland t1gstaticcomimagesqtbnANd9GcRxNnm0WVvah8R

Authors
  
Frederick Starr James A. Millward Peter C. Perdue Nabijan Tursun Dru C. Gladney Yitzhak Shichor Calla Wiemer Linda Benson Sean R. Roberts Stanley W. Toops Jay Dautcher Justin Rudelson William Jankowiak Graham E. Fuller Jonathan N. Lipman Gardner Bovingdon

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Xinjiang: China's Muslim Borderland is a 2004 academic book about Muslims who live in Xinjiang, a region of China. The collection of essays was edited by S. Frederick Starr. The book was heavily criticized by the Chinese government, and thirteen contributors were banned from entering the country.

Contents

Content

In a review for the Journal of East Asian Studies, Benjamin L. Read, an Associate Professor of Politics at the University of California, Santa Cruz, explained that the book talked about the impact of the 9/11 attacks on the region, the spread of substance abuse and HIV/AIDS, and "the depletion of water resources."

Response from the Chinese government

The book was heavily criticized by the Chinese government, who viewed it as an attempt to encourage separatist activity in Xinjiang. A translated version with a scathing introduction, calling the contributors "a hodgepodge of scholars, scholars in preparation, phony scholars, and shameless fabricators of political rumor", was published in China. Meanwhile, thirteen of the contributors were banned from entering China.

References

Xinjiang: China's Muslim Borderland Wikipedia