Science Guide (Chinese: 科学导报),[3] also known as Science and Technology Review,[4] is a simplified Chinese newspaper published in the People's Republic of China.[5] The newspaper was officially founded on January 4, 1985,[6] its predecessor was Science and Technology Newspaper (科技消息报), and was renamed Science Guide in October 2002 with the approval of the General Administration of Press and Publication.[7] It is sponsored and supervised by the Shanxi Association for Science and Technology (山西省科学技术协会).[8]
Publisher | Science Guide Agency |
---|---|
Founded | January 4, 1985 |
Language | Chinese |
Headquarters | Taiyuan[1] |
OCLC number | 123258794 |
Website | kxdb.com[2] |
Controversies
editIn 2008, when a safety incident occurred at the Huobao Ganhe Coal Mine (霍宝干河煤矿) in Shanxi province, real and fake journalists scrambled to get there - not to cover the incident, but to collect "hush money" from the mine.[9] Among them, Niu Jianli (牛建黎), a journalist from the Science Guide,[10] received 10,000 yuan from as the "hush money". After the scandal came to light, Niu's press card was revoked and he was ordered to return the stolen money, and the Shanxi provincial press and publication administration department imposed an administrative penalty of one warning and a fine of 30,000 yuan on the Science Guide Agency.[11]
References
edit- ^ "China Core Newspapers Full-text Database:Science Guide Newspaper". CNKI. Retrieved 22 August 2020.
- ^ "A variety of harmful disease-causing substances are present in the blood of the sick, subhealthy people and pets". Minjiang University. 2020-01-13.
- ^ "A comparative study of Chinese and Thai determiners and centrals". Southwest Jiaotong University. Retrieved 21 August 2020.
- ^ Kuang, Xianwen (May 16, 2020). "Self-Caging or Playing With the Edge? News Selection Autonomy in Authoritarian China". SAGE Open. 10 (2). doi:10.1177/2158244020922980. S2CID 219502021.
- ^ "WiseSearch Content List 2017" (PDF). CrossAsia. 2017-05-18.
- ^ "The first reading activity of the first member meeting of the Reading Club of Gezhi Academy opens". Science Guide. 2019-11-29.
- ^ Media, Issues 7–12. Media Magazine Agency. 2008. pp. 68–.
- ^ Directory of Chinese Newspapers. China ISBN Center Publishing House. 2006. pp. 96–. ISBN 978-7-5076-0335-4.
- ^ "The real and fake journalists lined up to receive hush money for the mining accident". China Labour Bulletin. 28 October 2008.
- ^ "58 true and false reporters were punished Reporter uncovered the shady was suppressed by suspension of pay". Apple Daily. 2008-11-28. Archived from the original on 2021-06-21. Retrieved 2020-08-22.
- ^ "Shanxi Province Huo Bao Ganhe coal mine "hush money" incident handling situation announcement". Xinhua News Agency. 2008-11-27.