Similar policing models under British occupation
@yorgosmoraitis
Lecturer in Chinese History at the University of Crete. Postdoctoral researcher at IDIS China Program. My first monograph is out now by Palgrave Macmillan: https://link.springer.com/book/9783031908842
Similar policing models under British occupation
Though it may seem somewhat trivial to mention given the current depressing global situation, I have an article forthcoming this September in the Chinese Journal of Transnational Law (SAGE Journals) on Hart’s mediation in the annexation of Burma.
Thanks for reading — now back to feeling helpless.
How Kafka (& Orwell) were read and thought about in China in the 1980s & after engelsbergideas.com/essays/kafka... cc @ewong.bsky.social @grantamag.bsky.social @literaryhub.bsky.social
On our blog, a new post Dr Yorgos Moraitis introduces his new book on Robert Hart: visualisingchina.net/blog/2025/10...
Recently, we have been working on the Greek translation of Prof. Bickers' book The Scramble for China, a work that covers a period of Chinese history largely unfamiliar to most Greek readers, yet one that explains China’s modern relations with the West.
Prof. Bickers was kind enough to invite me to contribute an article to his blog, sharing reflections on my book about Hart. To see my words featured alongside those of the many esteemed scholars he has invited to write for his blog is truly an honor.
hpchina.blogs.bristol.ac.uk/2025/10/19/g...
My book "Robert Hart and Sino-Foreign Disputes in Qing China, 1863-1908: Negotiating Sovereignty" has officially been published!
Link: link.springer.com/book/10.1007...
I would also like to extend my heartfelt thanks to Prof. Harlaftis for her initiative and encouragement in making this workshop a reality, and to Simon Ward for his insightful contributions on China's shipbuilding market.
I am also deeply grateful to Dr. De Angeli for her participation and fascinating presentation. Our connection goes back to my PhD days, and I would like to thank her once again for her invaluable feedback and unwavering support throughout that journey.
Prof. Henriot has been an endless source of inspiration for me and for anyone engaged in the study of Chinese history, and having him participate in a workshop I organized is a memory I will always treasure.
Yesterday, I had the profound honor of hosting Prof. Christian Henriot, Dr. Aglaia De Angeli, Prof. Gelina Harlaftis, and Simon Ward as speakers at the workshop I organized for the Institute for Mediterranean Studies about Greeks in 1930s Shanghai.
Pre-orders for the book will open soon: link.springer.com/book/9783031...
Hello! Since I’m new here, let me introduce myself. I teach Chinese history at the University of Crete, with a focus on late imperial China and its interactions with Western institutions. My book, Robert Hart and Sino-Foreign Disputes in Qing China, will be published by Palgrave this August.