This week on Sinica, attention turns to the torrential flooding which plagued Beijing earlier this week and claimed the lives of at least 77 residents in the Chinese capital. As tempers flare and city officials resign, questions mount over whether this natural disaster is turning into a political crisis for the city government. Also under discussion is a sharp increase in hospital killings, a brazen rise in online shadow banking, Chinese acquisitions in foreign oil-field markets, and first-hand reports of potentially edible wildlife in the vicinity of the Lido Hotel.

Joining Kaiser and Jeremy in our studio to discuss all of these issues and more are Alexa Olesen, a long-time China watcher and journalist for the Associated Press, and Josh Chin who writes for the Wall Street Journal and does a lot of detailed investigative work for the China Real Time Report. We're privileged to have such great journalists join us to share their perspectives on these stories yet again.

As always, let us remind you that if you'd like to download new episodes of Sinica automatically as a new show is released, you can subscribe to the show via iTunes. The easiest way of doing this is to open iTunes, select the option "Subscribe to Podcast" from the Advanced menu and copy the URL http://popupchinese.com/feeds/custom/sinica into the box when prompted. We also encourage people to download this show directly from Popup Chinese as a standalone mp3 file. Enjoy and let us know what you think!
 said on
July 28, 2012
RECOMMENDATIONS

Josh:

Are There Too Many Chinese People? (中国人太多了吗), by Liang Jianzhang/Li Jianxin

http://book.douban.com/subject/10574253/

Alexa:

The Midnight in Peking Audio Walk (also found on iTunes)

http://us.midnightinpeking.com/audio-walk/

City of Refuge, Abigail Washburn

http://www.amazon.com/City-Refuge-Abigail-Washburn/dp/B004BSWBZO

Jeremy:

The China History Podcast by Laszlo Montgomery in lovely Clairemont California

http://chinahistorypodcast.com/

Kaiser:

Aspen Ideas Festival - China and Democracy debate between Eric X Li and Minxin Pei, moderated by James Fallows

http://www.aspenideas.org/session/china-and-democracy

Mark Lesson Studied