A New Means of Supervision
In 2012, the Internet not only changed people's way of life, but also altered the fate of certain Chinese officials. Microblogging offered a new means of exposing corruption online
Now, Watchmen Watching Watches

Amid a microblogging boom in China, a growing number of people have spread first-hand materials exposing officials' misdeeds on their microblogs with great alacrity and precision. In response, anti-corruption agencies around China have been opening official microblogs to receive tip-offs from the public about officials' misdeeds.

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Battling Graft
The Communist Party of China intensifies anti-corruption efforts
Tightening the Reins
New corruption patterns and more crafty offenders pose a stern test for China's anti-graft efforts
Justice Through Internet
Judges resolve disputes via online mediation
Jumping on the Online Bandwagon
Government agencies endeavor to make the fast expanding micro-blogosphere more transparent
News  
- Xi Stresses Fight against Injustice, Corruption
- 160,000 Punished for Disciplinary Violations
- Anti-Graft Report Advises Restricting Officials' Power
- Chinese Cop Cleared of Graft Suspicion after Speedy Probe
- Another Official Investigated after Watch Suspicions
- CPC Pledges Unremitting Efforts to Combat Corruption
- Official Suspended from Post over Property Scandal
Video  
China Passes Online Data Privacy Rules
National People's Congress Reviews Internet Draft Law
Anti-Corruption Storm Sweeps across China
China Fights Corruption to Build Clean Government
Related Reports  
- Digital Inheritance
- Into the Blogosphere
- China's Anti-graft Efforts
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