The Xinjiang Data Project
Explainers
Explainer
'Assessing the impact of CCP information operations related to Xinjiang' report
Explainer
Borrowing mouths to speak on Xinjiang
Explainer
'#StopXinjiang Rumors' report
The CCP’s decentralised disinformation campaign
Explainer
'Cultivating friendly forces' report
The Chinese Communist Party’s influence operations in the Xinjiang Diaspora
Explainer
'The architecture of repression' report
Unpacking Xinjiang's governance
Explainer
‘Family de-planning’ report
The coercive campaign to drive down indigenous birth-rates in Xinjiang
Explainer
Disinformation on Xinjiang
The CCP, fringe media and US social media platforms play a role in shaping the Chinese government's global narrative on Xinjiang.
Explainer
Xinjiang Data Project first quarterly update - December 2020
Explainer
How Uyghur cultural practices are being politicized and co-opted in Xinjiang
This article examines the inscription of meshrep (mäshräp), an important Uyghur cultural practice, on UNESCO’s list of intangible cultural heritage and its subsequent co-optation by the Chinese government to ‘counter-extremism’ and promote national integration.
Explainer
Sterilizations and Mandatory Birth Control in Xinjiang
Evidence of the CCP’s campaign to suppress Uyghur birthrates in Xinjiang
Explainer
How companies profit from forced labour in Xinjiang
'They told her that if she didn’t sign, she would be sent back to the camp.'
Explainer
Cultural erasure
Tracing the destruction of Uyghur and Islamic spaces in Xinjiang
Explainer
How mass surveillance works in Xinjiang
Reverse engineering the police mass surveillance app
Explainer
Genomic surveillance
Inside China’s DNA dragnet
Explainer
Exploring Xinjiang's detention system
The world's most comprehensive database: 380+ facilities
Explainer
Transforming Uyghur domestic space
China’s "Three News" housing campaign in Xinjiang
Explainer
The leaked documents
The New York Times, International Consortium of Investigative Journalists (ICIJ)
Explainer
'Uyghurs for sale' report
‘Re-education’, forced labour and surveillance beyond Xinjiang.