English citations of Lin

In Shanxi edit

  • 2010 September 20, “Miners trapped”, in Global Times[1], archived from the original on October 1, 2019[2]:
    Seven miners were initially believed to be trapped underground a bauxite mine in Shanxi Province Sunday, local authorities said.
    The accident occurred at the Duoshi Mining Company in Lin county of Lüliang, the Lin county information office said in a press release.
  • 2012, Tim Wright, The Political Economy of the Chinese Coal Industry: Black Gold and Blood-stained Coal[3], Routledge, →ISBN, →LCCN, →OCLC, →OL, page 107:
    As mines increasingly became privatized, the profits no longer necessarily came to the villages and a major dispute was triggered in Lin County (Shanxi) in 2008 partly because the population felt they had received no benefits from the local mines (Nanfang dushi bao 22 October 2009).
  • 2018 May 11, Joseph Campbell, Elias Glenn, “Better off in a cave: Chinese count costs of apartments in anti-poverty campaign”, in Darren Schuettler, Clarence Fernandez, editors, Reuters[4], archived from the original on 24 November 2018, World News‎[5]:
    Li Caidong, 68, who has lived in a cave his entire life in Lin county, stands outside his cave, at sunset in Lin county, Shanxi province, China March 14, 2018. []
    The relocations are voluntary, say residents of Lin county, but Guo sees no reason to abandon her cave house. []
    “Our work has been proceeding smoothly,” Liu Yongfu, an official handling poverty alleviation and development efforts, told a news conference in Beijing in March. “The common folk are very supportive.” But authorities in Lin county declined to comment on their relocation plans when contacted by Reuters.

Other edit