Ivan Franceschini
ivanfranceschini.bsky.social
Ivan Franceschini
@ivanfranceschini.bsky.social
Founder and chief editor of the Made in China Journal, The People's Map of Global China, and Global China Pulse. Researching ethnic Chinese transnational crime, especially in the online scam industry.
Reposted by Ivan Franceschini
|| NEW EPISODE || Six years after Hong Kong’s mass protests, @yangyangcheng.bsky.social talks with sociologist Ching Kwan Lee and historian @jwassers.bsky.social about the struggle’s enduring significance, its transnational afterlives, and what it teaches us amid today’s democratic backsliding.
Episode 6 | Hong Kong in Protest, Redux
In 2019, more than a million people poured onto the streets of Hong Kong, with many returning week after week. The song ‘Glory to Hong Kong’ soon emerged as the movement’s unofficial anthem. What bega...
madeinchinajournal.com
November 26, 2025 at 8:34 AM
Reposted by Ivan Franceschini
|| NEW PROFILE || Chinese migration to Madagascar began more than a century ago and the new arrivals evolved into a deeply integrated community. However, bilateral ties have experienced ebbs and flows, with China’s image in the country impacted by recent controversies, writes Xuefei Shi.
Madagascar - The People's Map of Global China
Chinese migration to Madagascar began more than a century ago and the new arrivals evolved into a deeply integrated community. However, bilateral ties have experienced ebbs and flows, with China’s ima...
thepeoplesmap.net
November 25, 2025 at 10:17 PM
Reposted by Ivan Franceschini
Don’t miss the first in our three-part webinar series on online gender-based violence in China, happening this Thursday. The event will be held in English and Chinese, with simultaneous interpretation. Register and help us spread the word:
globalchinalab.org/confronting-...
November 24, 2025 at 9:21 PM
Reposted by Ivan Franceschini
How do pregnant women in China navigate empowerment amid shifting gender norms? Mingxuan Li and Anna Lora-Wainwright show how women challenge patriarchal expectations through two intertwined strategies: seeking greater support from partners and asserting autonomy to protect their own agency.
Pathways to Empowered Motherhood in Contemporary China
An essay on how pregnant women in China negotiate empowerment, balancing support, autonomy, and resistance to patriarchal norms.
madeinchinajournal.com
November 24, 2025 at 6:38 AM
Reposted by Ivan Franceschini
China’s achievements at scale are undeniable—but scale is not system. Responding to @kaiserkuo.bsky.social’s call to judge by delivery, @messingschlager.bsky.social argues that durable performance depends on independent measurement, contestable feedback, and system integration, not size alone.
Scale Is Not a System: Learning from China without Mimicry
A reply to Kaiser Kuo that weighs China’s achievements against the limits of performance legitimacy and the value of democratic institutions.
madeinchinajournal.com
November 13, 2025 at 10:21 AM
Reposted by Ivan Franceschini
When the MaskPark case broke on China’s internet, it exposed a vast online trade in non-consensual images of women. As censorship buried the story, victims were left to navigate trauma, stigma, and official neglect on their own. Ling Li reflects on what this says on gendered violence in China today.
MaskPark and the Silence around China’s Gender-Based Violence Online | Made in China Journal
When the MaskPark incident broke in mid-2025, it jolted the Chinese internet (Hawkins 2025). Hidden behind the encrypted walls of Telegram—a platform officially blocked in China but accessible through...
madeinchinajournal.com
November 11, 2025 at 9:47 AM
Reposted by Ivan Franceschini
In her work, C. Pam Zhang explores Chinese diasporic subjectivities across shifting temporal and geographic terrains. Adopting a queer counter-perspective, she unsettles racist, classist, and heteronormative narratives of ‘Chineseness’, ‘manhood’, and ‘womanhood’, writes Kimiko Suda.
Queer-Feminist Journeys as Critical Counter-Frame
Queer Chinese diaspora in C. Pam Zhang’s novels, with a focus on trauma, counter-narratives, pleasure, and global responsibility.
madeinchinajournal.com
November 6, 2025 at 10:56 PM
Reposted by Ivan Franceschini
Drawing on one month of residence in a retirement community outside Beijing, Brian DeMare examines the Chinese silver-hair market, tracing everyday experiences of retirees and highlighting the interplay between personal memories of PRC history and the commodification of elder care in today's China.
A Grey Beard in the Silver-Hair Market: One Month in China’s Retirement City
Laoye left Louisiana like an outlaw cowboy, abandoning all his earthly possessions, and hitting the road. The flat-screen TVs, the piles of clothes, the closet full of USB cords? No longer needed. Jus...
madeinchinajournal.com
November 4, 2025 at 10:12 PM
Reposted by Ivan Franceschini
Why did Western firms move manufacturing to East Asia? Who are the workers behind the region's industrial rise, and what are the social costs? For our podcast, @yangyangcheng.bsky.social spoke with Anru Lee and Ya-Wen Lei on gender, labour, and (de)industrialisation in China and Taiwan.
Episode 5 | Labour and (De)Industrialisation in East Asia | Made in China Journal
Over the past few years, industrial policy and manufacturing capacity, especially in the high-tech sector, have been at the centre of great power rivalry between the United States and China. The White...
madeinchinajournal.com
October 30, 2025 at 9:37 AM
Reposted by Ivan Franceschini
||NEW PROFILE|| Venezuela–China ties go back to 1974, but it was under Chávez that the relationship deepened through oil-backed loans and cooperation deals. Today, despite sanctions and economic collapse, Beijing remains a central, if more cautious, pillar of Caracas’ foreign and development policy.
Venezuela - The People's Map of Global China
Venezuela established diplomatic relations with the People's Republic of China in 1974, but it was under Hugo Chávez that ties deepened through oil-backed loans and extensive cooperation agreements. I...
thepeoplesmap.net
October 24, 2025 at 4:03 AM
Reposted by Ivan Franceschini
In this essay, Qing Shen examines how older gay men in Shanghai reflect on their heterosexual marriages amid public debates that brand such unions as 'marriage fraud'. In doing so, he unsettles the moral certainty behind that label and shows why these arrangements cannot be reduced to deception.
‘Marriage Fraud’? Reflections on Marriage of Older Queer Men in Shanghai | Made in China Journal
In April 2025, Aqiang, a renowned gay rights advocate, published an online article titled ‘Condemning Gay Elders for “Marriage Fraud” Is as Absurd as Blaming Ancient People for Not Using the Internet’...
madeinchinajournal.com
October 21, 2025 at 9:47 AM
Reposted by Ivan Franceschini
In this essay, Ling Tang examines gender-critical currents in Chinese feminist scholarship: one revives socialist legacies to unsettle Western feminist paradigms, the other rejects both socialist and liberal frames in favour of grounded documentation within China’s historical and cultural contexts.
Gender-Critical Chinese Feminisms: From Critical Socialism to Post-Utopia | Made in China Journal
Since the 2010s, the debate about anti-gender politics has centred on the rise of right-wing forces and ideologies that are trans-exclusionary, queerphobic, and anti-feminist—particularly hostile to q...
madeinchinajournal.com
October 20, 2025 at 8:48 AM
Reposted by Ivan Franceschini
New book drop 📚 Scam: Inside Southeast Asia’s Cybercrime Compounds

Our visual feature created with authors @ivanfranceschini.bsky.social‬ and Ling Li details life inside huge scam factories using modern slavery to staff their secret compounds.

👉 scam-factories-life-inside....
October 12, 2025 at 11:47 PM
Reposted by Ivan Franceschini
In this essay, Alex Taek-Gwang Lee argues that China no longer mirrors Western modernity but transforms it from within, forcing us to rethink the very categories through which we understand capitalism, socialism, and the modern world, and to confront the limits of the West's theoretical imagination.
The Repetition of China | Made in China Journal
Chinese scholars who have engaged with Fredric Jameson often observe—sometimes with admiration and sometimes with a degree of irony—that he appears ‘more Marxist than any Marxist in China’. Jameson’s ...
madeinchinajournal.com
October 15, 2025 at 8:24 PM
Reposted by Ivan Franceschini
|| NEW PROFILE || A key node of the China–Myanmar Economic Corridor, the Kyaukphyu Deep-Sea Port was meant to anchor China’s access to the Indian Ocean. Yet, 12 years on, the project faces mounting obstacles—from armed conflict to debt concerns—casting doubt on its future, writes Linda Calabrese.
Kyaukphyu Deep-Sea Port - The People's Map of Global China
The Kyaukphyu Deep-Sea Port, a cornerstone of China’s Belt and Road Initiative (BRI) and the China–Myanmar Economic Corridor (CMEC), is a proposed deepwater seaport in Rakhine State, Myanmar. Intended...
thepeoplesmap.net
October 9, 2025 at 11:23 PM
Reposted by Ivan Franceschini
Thirty years after the 1995 Beijing Women’s Conference, the Chinese government is once again calling on women to serve the nation, this time in science and technology. In this essay, @yangyangcheng.bsky.social revisits a century of women in science in China, tracing their struggles and achievements.
Beyond Representation: On Being a Woman in Science in China | Made in China Journal
In the autumn of 1995, Ye Shuhua made a speech. During the NGO Forum at the United Nation’s Fourth World Conference on Women, held in Beijing, the 68-year-old astronomer took to the microphone and cal...
madeinchinajournal.com
October 8, 2025 at 8:20 AM
Reposted by Ivan Franceschini
What does it mean to speak of decriminalisation or depathologisation of homosexuality in China? In his new essay, Petrus Liu challenges Western narratives of queer progress, arguing that same-sex desire was never criminalised but rendered unintelligible within prevailing legal and cultural norms.
Queer Unintelligibility in China | Made in China Journal
It has become something of a truism, in both academic discourse and everyday conversation, that invisibility is a central form of queer oppression. In a culture in which queer lives are erased—whether...
madeinchinajournal.com
October 6, 2025 at 8:39 AM
Reposted by Ivan Franceschini
How should we understand Jin Xing, China’s most famous transgender celebrity? In this new essay, Yahia Ma unpacks her embrace of gender binarism not as a paradox, but as a strategy that secures mainstream visibility while opening space to imagine cultural and political otherness in China and beyond.
Only Two Genders? On Jin Xing’s Reaffirmation of Gender Binarism and Heteronormativity
Jin Xing 金星 (literally, ‘golden star’, or ‘Venus’ in English) is a household name in mainland China. Since undergoing gender-affirmation surgery in 1994, she has established herself as a dancer, telev...
madeinchinajournal.com
September 30, 2025 at 11:21 AM
Reposted by Ivan Franceschini
Southeast Asia is now a global hub for online scams. But who works in these compounds, and under what conditions? How should authorities respond? In this episode of our podcast, @yangyangcheng.bsky.social speaks with @ivanfranceschini.bsky.social and Ling Li about their new book 'Scam' (Verso 2025).
Episode 4 | Inside Southeast Asia’s Scam Compounds | Made in China Journal
Rejecting calls from an unknown number, blocking suspicious accounts on social media, turning down a job offer too good to be true: these days, almost all of us have had some interactions with online ...
madeinchinajournal.com
September 25, 2025 at 9:16 AM
Reposted by Ivan Franceschini
What happens when queer desire, religion, and science fiction collide in space? In Jesus on Mars, Cui Zi’en offers a haunting, dreamlike story that moves between faith and fantasy. One of China’s most daring queer voices brought to new readers in Yahia Ma's translation.
Jesus on Mars | Made in China Journal
(Translated and introduced by Yahia MA) I first experienced Cui Zi’en’s work in mainland China in the early 2000s, when I was an undergraduate at a university in the country’s northwest and was becomi...
madeinchinajournal.com
September 24, 2025 at 9:02 AM
Reposted by Ivan Franceschini
In this essay, Ida Huang explores how LGBTQ+ student groups in China carve out 'queer heterotopias', fragile yet powerful spaces of care, imagination, and play within authoritarian structures. By centring these practices, she invites us to rethink what activism under constraint can look like.
Queering the University: Student Activism and Heterotopia | Made in China Journal
One summer a few years ago, when I was an undergraduate, I had the opportunity to attend an LGBTQ+ youth camp in a city in southern China, where I made many friends. After each day of classes, we hung...
madeinchinajournal.com
September 18, 2025 at 7:48 AM
Reposted by Ivan Franceschini
|| UPDATED PROFILE || Sri Lanka has long been one of China’s closest partners in South Asia, with ties spanning diplomacy, trade, and massive infrastructure projects. But this partnership also sparks debate over debt, sovereignty, and who really benefits. A profile by Yihao Li and Thiruni Kelegama.
Sri Lanka - The People's Map of Global China
China regards Sri Lanka as an ‘all-weather friend’—a term reserved for only a handful of China’s most trusted bilateral partners. Sino-Sri Lankan relations have been characterised by frequent high-lev...
thepeoplesmap.net
September 17, 2025 at 10:37 AM
Reposted by Ivan Franceschini
How did radio and the circulation of news transform modern China? In his new book 'Seeking News, Making China', John Alekna traces how emerging technologies reshaped politics, community, and state–society relations in the twentieth century. Read the conversation with Laura De Giorgi.
Seeking News, Making China: A Conversation with John Alekna
In Seeking News, Making China: Information, Technology, and the Emergence of Mass Society (Stanford University Press, 2024), John Alekna explores how the rise of radio and the circulation of news tran...
madeinchinajournal.com
September 13, 2025 at 2:20 AM
Reposted by Ivan Franceschini
Neither fully accepted nor entirely apart, the descendants of foreigners in China embody the tensions of identity in a globalised yet nationalistic age. Chengzhi Zhang traces their struggles for belonging and what this reveals about the boundaries of Chineseness.
Flowing without Roots: The Identity Crisis of Foreigners’ Descendants in Mainland China | Made in China Journal
In 2009, a woman named Lou Jing, born to a Chinese mother and an African American father, went on a TV show in China and declared herself a proud and patriotic Chinese person (Leung 2015). Her remarks...
madeinchinajournal.com
September 9, 2025 at 7:38 AM