The nationalism of ideas
Xi Jinping wants Chinese systems of knowledge, free of Western values

In beijing a quarter-century ago, Chaguan witnessed a rare event: a criminal court finding a defendant not guilty. Back then, over 90% of Chinese criminal trials ended in convictions. This time the accused—an alleged armed robber—walked free. A lack of hard evidence and his refusal to answer police questions proved decisive. So did his defence lawyer’s plea that it is better to acquit a guilty man than to risk the “horror” of jailing an innocent.
Explore more
This article appeared in the China section of the print edition under the headline “The nationalism of ideas”
More from China

Which Olympic sports is China good at?
The country’s athletes seem to prefer competing indoors and as individuals

To revive the economy, China wants consumers to buy better stuff
It is offering them money to do so

When China hides disasters in a memory hole
A revealing attempt to forget a terrible plane crash
China is itching to mine the ocean floor
It wants to dominate critical-mineral supply chains
China unveils its new economic vision
It promises many reforms, but remains ambivalent about the role of the market
The noose around the press in Hong Kong tightens
Even advocating press freedom begins to seem a bad career move