Arsenic distribution and the pollution characteristics -- Pollution source distribution of arsenic in the typical smelter -- Arsenic behaviors and pollution control technologies in aqueous solution -- Arsenic behaviors and pollution control technologies for solid waste -- Clean utilization of arsenic bearing materials
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Man has to face the unknown future anytime and anywhere. For this reason, he needs to believe in the truth beyond himself. Otherwise, society will decline, decay, and never come back. Similarly, human beings are always faced with social conflicts everywhere. For this reason, he needs a legal system. Otherwise, society will disintegrate and fall apart. However, from the constitutional text, there is no uniform title and standard definition of freedom of religious belief in all countries. Countries in the west are called religious freedom, while China adopts the concept of freedom of religious belief. This article will further analyze the different influences of Chinese and western religions on the law. It is worth pointing out that the living environment of law in the west is not as good as Chinese people think, and the authority of law and people's belief in law are gradually drifting away. Based on the basic theory of freedom of religious belief, this paper analyzes the different influences of Chinese and western religions on the law, analyzes the present situation and demands for legal protection of freedom of religious belief in contemporary China, and tries to put forward feasible solutions.
This book provides a rare account of China's market reform in the own words of the Chinese: politicians, intellectuals, the media, and journalists. The Chinese rhetoric –complex, ironic, argumentative, and abstruse – may hold the key to understanding China's unique style of elite politics, state-citizen relationship, and institutional development. Topics include the establishment and change of the stock market and the recent institutionalization of the private equity industry. Rhetoricizing the Chinese capitalist transformation provides a glimpse into how the Chinese minds work as Chinese people participate in the process of changing the country and themselves. Adopting both an indigenous perspective and an outsider view on China, this book serves as a guide for anyone interested in learning how Chinese reason, persuade, debate, and resist.
This book provides a rare account of China's market reform in the own words of the Chinese: politicians, intellectuals, the media, and journalists. The Chinese rhetoric―complex, ironic, argumentative, and abstruse―may hold the key to understanding China's unique style of elite politics, state-citizen relationship, and institutional development. Topics include the establishment and change of the stock market and the recent institutionalization of the private equity industry. Rhetoricizing the Chinese capitalist transformation provides a glimpse into how the Chinese minds work as Chinese people participate in the process of changing the country and themselves. Adopting both an indigenous perspective and an outsider view on China, this book serves as a guide for anyone interested in learning how Chinese reason, persuade, debate, and resist. ; This book provides a rare account of China's market reform in the own words of the Chinese: politicians, intellectuals, the media, and journalists. The Chinese rhetoric―complex, ironic, argumentative, and abstruse―may hold the key to understanding China's unique style of elite politics, state-citizen relationship, and institutional development. Topics include the establishment and change of the stock market and the recent institutionalization of the private equity industry. Rhetoricizing the Chinese capitalist transformation provides a glimpse into how the Chinese minds work as Chinese people participate in the process of changing the country and themselves. Adopting both an indigenous perspective and an outsider view on China, this book serves as a guide for anyone interested in learning how Chinese reason, persuade, debate, and resist.
Suggests important ramifications for both Western and Eastern Human Resources Practices and is the first research of its kind to empirically investigate the effect of Chinese core values, which originated from Chinese traditional thinking, on HRM practices in China, Traditional Chinese Thinking on HRM Practices highlights the important ramifications for both Western and Eastern Human Resources Practices and is the first research of its kind to empirically investigate the effect of Chinese core values, which originated from Chinese traditional thinking, on HRM practices in China. The author of this volume empirically investigates Chinese Human Resource practices from a cultural and philosophical perspective, using a qualitative research strategy. She offers a broader explanation for the peculiarity of Chinese HRM, whilst complementing the large volume of existing quantitative studies, which are hypotheses-led and driven by Western theory. The author tentatively explores the philosophical underpinnings of Western HRM and compares Western and Eastern ways of thinking systematically. In doing so, she reveals the current situation and trend of HRM in China under the influence of Chinese traditional thinking. This volume will help readers gain a better understanding of the Chinese style of management and will contribute to the development of management and organization theories in the Chinese context
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"Traditional Chinese Thinking on HRM Practices highlights the important ramifications for both Western and Eastern Human Resources Practices and is the first research of its kind to empirically investigate the effect of Chinese core values, which originated from Chinese traditional thinking, on HRM practices in China. The author of this volume empirically investigates Chinese Human Resource practices from a cultural and philosophical perspective, using a qualitative research strategy. She offers a broader explanation for the peculiarity of Chinese HRM, whilst complementing the large volume of existing quantitative studies, which are hypotheses-led and driven by Western theory. The author tentatively explores the philosophical underpinnings of Western HRM and compares Western and Eastern ways of thinking systematically. In doing so, she reveals the current situation and trend of HRM in China under the influence of Chinese traditional thinking. This volume will help readers gain a better understanding of the Chinese style of management and will contribute to the development of management and organization theories in the Chinese context"--
We examine the cross-sectional seasonality of stock excess returns in China. We find that stocks' historical excess returns are positively related to their future excess returns under a congruent-mood period and negatively associated with their future excess returns under a noncongruent-mood period. Besides, stocks with larger mood beta tend to outperform during mood periods, and this impact is still significant after differentiating companies. Moreover, consistent with our hypotheses, mood beta has stronger explanatory power after China's unique Split-Share Structure Reform and RMB Exchange Rate Reform. Finally, mood beta has stronger explanatory power compared to sentiment beta during ascending and descending mood months.
With the growing participation of emerging countries in the global data governance, the traditional legislative paradigm dominated by the European Union and the United States is constantly being disintegrated and reshaped. It is of particular importance for China to establish the regulatory framework of crossborder data transfer, for not only it involves the rights of Chinese citizens and entities, but also the cyber sovereignty and national security, as well as the framing of global cyberspace rules. China keeps leveraging the data sovereignty to fasten the law-makings to support the development of critical technology in digital domains and infrastructure construction. This paper aims to systematise Chinese regulations for cross-border data exchange following the chronological order. The enacted and draft provisions as well as binding and non-binding regulatory rules are studied, and various positive dynamic developments in the framing of China's cross-border data regulation are shown. Despite certain limitations, the Cybersecurity Law, together with Civil Code and Personal Information Protection Law, demonstrates great willingness towards a stronger data protection regime and more flexible regulatory mechanism.