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Diaspora charity and welfare sovereignty in the Chinese republic: Shanghai charity innovator William Yinson Lee (Li Yuanxin, 1884–1965)

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posted on 2024-07-11, 10:56 authored by John FitzgeraldJohn Fitzgerald, Mei Fen Kuo
William Yinson Lee (Li Yuanxin), an influential charity innovator, introduced many modern fund-raising techniques into Shanghai from the 1920s to the 1940s, a time of growing foreign intervention in charitable services to China’s poor and disadvantaged. From the late nineteenth century, foreign charities and humanitarian agencies had drawn attention to inequality and injustice in China and tried to remedy them through charitable investments in education, health, and social welfare. These efforts were welcome as substantial support to the needy but unwelcome in drawing international attention to China’s failure to care for its own. Underlying ambivalence toward foreign charities was reflected in efforts to recover China’s welfare sovereignty by Chinese émigrés returning to China from Anglophone settlements around the Pacific Rim. For Lee and his associates in Shanghai, charity served as an entrée into elite social and political circles and as a medium for cross-cultural negotiations, for participating actively in civic life, for promoting trans-Pacific trade, and for recovering welfare sovereignty for modern China.

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PDF (Accepted manuscript)

ISSN

1940-5065

Journal title

Twentieth-Century China

Volume

42

Issue

1

Pagination

72-96

Publisher

The Johns Hopkins University Press

Copyright statement

Copyright © 2017 Twentieth Century China, Inc. The accepted manuscript is reproduced in accordance with the copyright policy of the publisher.

Language

eng

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