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The Xinjiang emergency
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08 February 2022

1 Framing the Xinjiang emergency: colonialism and settler colonialism as pathways to cultural genocide?– Michael Clarke
Part I: Context
2 Echoes from the past: repression in the Uyghur region now and then – Sandrine Catris
3 The Kashgar Dangerous House Reform Program: social engineering, ‘a rebirth of the nation’ and a significant building block in China’s creeping genocide – Anna Hayes
4 Settler colonialism in the name of counterterrorism: of ‘savages’ and ‘terrorists’ – Sean R. Roberts
Part II: Discourses and practices of repression
5 Pathology, inducement and mass incarcerations of Xinjiang’s ‘targeted population’ – Timothy A. Grose and James Leibold
6 Two-faced: Turkic Muslim camp workers, subjection and active witnessing – Darren Byler
7Corrective ‘re-education’ as (cultural) genocide: a content analysis of the Uyghur primary school textbook Til-Ädäbiyat (2018, rev. 1st ed) – Dilmurat Mahmut and Joanne Smith Finley
8 Predatory biopolitics: organ harvesting and other means of monetizing Uyghur ‘surplus’ – Matthew P. Robertson
Part III: Domestic and international implications
9 ‘Round the clock, three dimensional control’: the evolution and implications of the ‘Xinjiang mode’ of counterterrorism – Michael Clarke
10 The effect of Xinjiang’s virtual lockdown on the Uyghur diaspora – Ablimit Baki Elterish
11 ‘Window of opportunity’: the Xinjiang emergency in China’s ‘new type of international relations’ – David Tobin
Index