OBSERVARE
Universidade Autónoma de Lisboa
e-ISSN: 1647-7251
VOL. 16, Nº. 2, TD2
Thematic Dossier
Portugal and China in International Relations:
Historical Legacies and Contemporary Dynamics
February 2026
55
IDEOLOGY AND EDUCATION IN CHINA: PORTUGUESE LANGUAGE POLICY
AT THE INTERSECTION OF STATECRAFT AND STRATEGY
LUÍS FILIPE PESTANA
luis.pestana@ipor.org.mo
He completed his bachelor’s degree (2010) and master’s degree (2013) in International Relations
at the Catholic University of Portugal. Since 2021, he has been enrolled in a Ph.D. program in
Political Science at the Instituto Superior de Ciências Sociais e Políticas. His research focuses
primarily on ideology and the Chinese education system, with additional interests in language
policy and China’s foreign policy. He has resided in China since 2014, having taught Portuguese
at Harbin Normal University (20142016) and Beijing Normal University (20162023). He
currently works for the Instituto Português do Oriente (IPOR, Portugal), serving as the institute’s
delegate for Mainland China at its Beijing office. He also holds the position of Education and
Culture Attaché at the Embassy of Portugal in Beijing. In addition to teaching Portuguese, he
supports the organization of cultural activities, facilitates connections between IPOR and other
Camões Institute focal points across Asia, and assists the Embassy in various education- and
culture-related functions.
LUÍS PIRES
luispires@um.edu.mo
He is a Senior Instructor in the Department of Portuguese at the Faculty of Arts and Humanities,
University of Macau (China). He holds a degree in Classical Languages and Literatures from the
University of Lisbon and a Master’s in Portuguese as a Non-Native Language from the Open
University of Portugal. His academic and professional trajectory includes five years as a
Portuguese language lecturer at Tianjin Foreign Studies University, following an invitation from
the University of Lisbon. Subsequently, he was appointed by the Camões Institute to Shanghai
International Studies University, where he lectured for four years. He later served as Attaché for
Education and Culture at the Portuguese Embassy in Beijing, concurrently coordinating the local
delegation of the Portuguese Institute of the Orient (IPOR). Luís Pires earned his Ph.D. in
Portuguese Studies, with a specialization in Language Policy, from the Open University of
Portugal. His research interests focus on language planning, linguistic diplomacy, and the role of
Portuguese in multilingual contexts, particularly within the framework of Sino-Lusophone
relations.
Abstract
This study examines the ideological foundations of foreign language education in the People’s
Republic of China, arguing that language planning is inseparable from the state’s ideological
strategies and international engagement. Drawing from a historical perspective that traces
the evolution of Chinese education from the late imperial period to the present, it
demonstrates how educational policy has consistently subordinated intercultural exchange to
national interests. Foreign language instruction, rather than reflecting openness or pluralism,
is deployed as a strategic instrument, valued for its developmental utility while subject to
strict ideological boundaries. The analysis focuses on the political role of education as a means
of regulating access to foreign knowledge and maintaining internal cohesion. In this context,
foreign languages are approached not as cultural bridges, but as managed resources:
imported for diplomatic and economic advantage yet carefully contained to avoid ideological
disruption. This dynamic is exemplified by the case of Portuguese, whose rise in China’s
academic landscape reflects wider geopolitical and economic shifts rather than cultural
demand or educational reform. Its institutional expansion aligns closely with China’s foreign
policy interests, especially in relation to Lusophone countries and the symbolic role of Macau.
JANUS.NET, e-journal of International Relations
e-ISSN: 1647-7251
VOL. 16, Nº. 2, TD2
Thematic Dossier - Portugal and China in International Relations: Historical Legacies
and Contemporary Dynamics
February 2026, pp. 55-79
Ideology and Education in China: Portuguese Language Policy at the Intersection
of Statecraft and Strategy
Luís Filipe Pestana, Luís Pires
56
By situating language policy within the ideological architecture of the Chinese state, the article
contributes to the study of international education as a form of statecraft. It also underscores
the importance of aligning language promotion strategies - such as those pursued by Portugal
- with the internal logics and constraints of partner countries. In doing so, it responds to the
goals of this special issue by offering a critical, historically grounded account of Sino-
Portuguese engagement through the lens of ideology, education, and global positioning.
Keywords
Ideology and Education, Language Policy, Portuguese as a Foreign Language, China.
Resumo
Este estudo examina os fundamentos ideológicos do ensino de línguas estrangeiras na
República Popular da China, argumentando que o planeamento linguístico é inseparável das
estratégias ideológicas do Estado e do seu posicionamento internacional. A partir de uma
perspetiva histórica que acompanha a evolução da educação chinesa desde o final do período
imperial até à atualidade, demonstra-se que a política educativa tem, de forma consistente,
subordinado o intercâmbio intercultural aos interesses nacionais. O ensino de línguas
estrangeiras, longe de refletir abertura ou pluralismo, é mobilizado como instrumento
estratégico, valorizado pela sua utilidade para o desenvolvimento, mas confinado a limites
ideológicos estritos. A análise centra-se no papel político da educação enquanto mecanismo
de regulação do acesso ao conhecimento estrangeiro e de preservação da coesão interna.
Neste enquadramento, as línguas estrangeiras não são concebidas como pontes culturais,
mas como recursos geridos: importados por razões diplomáticas e económicas, porém
cuidadosamente controlados para evitar potenciais perturbações ideológicas. Esta dinâmica é
exemplificada pelo caso da língua portuguesa, cujo crescimento no panorama académico
chinês reflete transformações geopolíticas e económicas mais amplas, e não uma procura
cultural intrínseca ou uma reforma educativa. A sua expansão institucional alinha-se
fortemente com os interesses da política externa chinesa, particularmente nas relações com
os países lusófonos e no papel simbólico de Macau. Ao situar a política linguística na
arquitetura ideológica do Estado chinês, esta investigação contribui para o estudo da educação
internacional como forma de “construção do estado”. Sublinha, igualmente, a importância de
alinhar estratégias de promoção linguística - como as desenvolvidas por Portugal - com as
lógicas internas e as restrições dos países parceiros. Deste modo, responde aos objetivos
deste número temático ao oferecer uma leitura crítica e historicamente fundamentada do
envolvimento sinoportuguês através das lentes da ideologia, da educação e do
posicionamento global.
Palavras-chave
Ideologia e Educação, Política Linguística, Português Língua Estrangeira, China.
How to cite this article
Pestana, Luís Filipe & Pires, Luís (2026). Ideology and Education in China: Portuguese Language
Policy at the Intersection of Statecraft and Strategy. Janus.net, e-journal of international relations.
Thematic Dossier - Portugal and China in International Relations: Historical Legacies and
Contemporary Dynamics, VOL. 16, Nº. 2, TD2, February 2026, pp. 55-79.
https://doi.org/10.26619/1647-7251.DT0126.3
Article submitted on 13rd November 2025 and accepted for publication on 22nd January
2026.
JANUS.NET, e-journal of International Relations
e-ISSN: 1647-7251
VOL. 16, Nº. 2, TD2
Thematic Dossier - Portugal and China in International Relations: Historical Legacies
and Contemporary Dynamics
February 2026, pp. 55-79
Ideology and Education in China: Portuguese Language Policy at the Intersection
of Statecraft and Strategy
Luís Filipe Pestana, Luís Pires
57
IDEOLOGY AND EDUCATION IN CHINA: PORTUGUESE LANGUAGE
POLICY AT THE INTERSECTION OF STATECRAFT AND STRATEGY
1
LUÍS FILIPE PESTANA
LUÍS PIRES
Introduction
Foreign language education in China has long mirrored the state’s evolving engagement
with the outside world. While English has remained dominant, other languages have
gained traction according to shifting political and economic interests. Among these,
Portuguese presents a compelling case, due not only to its unique historical entry into
China’s linguistic landscape but also because of its association with strategic partnerships
across the Lusophone world.
This comes at a time when the Chinese leadership has embarked on a decidedly more
ideological approach to education. Drawing lessons from classical Chinese philosophy and
incorporating elements of Marxism-Leninism, Xi Jinping’s Thought on Socialism with
Chinese Characteristics for a New Era attempts to produce a form of harmonious society,
by which the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) is the sole unifier of the Chinese people.
Portuguese as a foreign language, which is directed at foreign nationals who are not from
the Community of Portuguese Language Countries (CPLP), thus faces new challenges.
The present paper offers a broad evolution of the concept of harmony and how it has
been used during different stages of Chinese history. Furthermore, the CCP’s ideology
has been increasingly pushed into the education system since 2012, as a way of creating
a harmonious society Under-Heaven, starting with the Chinese youths. This, conversely,
leads to a new evaluation of different possibilities for PLE to adapt to the current
ideological education environment in a time of great uncertainty.
Building Social Harmony in the Era of Xi Jinping: The Role of Education
Philosophical Origins of Harmony
The concept of harmony (he ) is ever-present in Chinese history. During the pre-Qin
dynasty period, Chen (2018, p. 43) states that social and political upheaval was the norm.
1
Conflict of Interests: The authors declare that there are no conflicts of interest associated with this study..
JANUS.NET, e-journal of International Relations
e-ISSN: 1647-7251
VOL. 16, Nº. 2, TD2
Thematic Dossier - Portugal and China in International Relations: Historical Legacies
and Contemporary Dynamics
February 2026, pp. 55-79
Ideology and Education in China: Portuguese Language Policy at the Intersection
of Statecraft and Strategy
Luís Filipe Pestana, Luís Pires
58
Pines (2023) describes how the decline of the Zhou dynasty (1046 to 256 BC) resulted
in a power struggle to achieve unity under a new leadership. The 4th century BCE
furthered this status quo during the Warring States period (Zhanguo 战国, 453–221 BC).
Pines (2023) indicates that:
“As wars became bloodier and more devastating, and with no adequate
diplomatic means to settle the conflicts in sight, most thinkers and statesmen
came to an understanding that unity of “All-Under-Heaven” (tianxia
天下
) was
the only means to attain peace and stability” (Pines, 2000).
This greatly influenced philosophers of the time who searched for the ideal form of
harmony. Li (2008, pp. 423 & 424) further confirms this statement, elaborating that
harmony pre-dates Confucius. Citing Shi Bo, a scholar-minister of the Western Zhou
(1046–771 BCE), harmony is achieved by means of the five flavours and six measures
of sound. Yan, Li & Fu (2021, p. 57) further illustrate how Shi Bo viewed this concept as
a way of congregating different perspectives to formulate new ones. This “harmony
without uniformity”, which focuses on achieving an equilibrium between different
perspectives, is also promoted by the Chinese government (China Keywords, 2024), as
this article will later illustrate.
The Warring States period thus produced a series of schools of thought, each with their
epistemology and solutions to create greater harmony. Of the One Hundred Schools, four
are of particular interest to this study and are considered among the most influential of
Chinese philosophies: Confucianism, Daoism, Legalism and Mohism. The first of these,
Confucianism, has generally garnered more attention as still contributing to the guiding
principles the CCP follows to this day. In the Confucian Classic Shi Jing (诗经), harmony
is an ideal that encapsulates a balanced relationship with other people and nature. In the
Yue Ji (乐记), following up on Shi Bo’s statements, music plays an integral role in
promoting morals. Li (2008, p. 425) further states:
“Confucius considered harmony fundamentally necessary. In the Confucian
view, music more than anything else captures the essence of harmony. Music
is the process of bringing a plurality of sounds into concord. (…) In the
Confucian view, music has this powerful positive effect on people because it
is intrinsically harmonizing".
Harmony is not exclusive to Confucian thought, on the contrary. In Daoism it plays a
central role, as Chen (2018, p. 42) clarifies. For Daoists, there are three main forms of
harmony: natural harmony (tian he 天和), human harmony (ren he 人和), and the
harmony of the heart-mind (xin he心和). They are all integrated to form their own
philosophy, one that is centred on humans’ relation to the spirit and not merely attached
to societal and political affairs (Chen, 2018, p. 43).
Legalism, another philosophy of the “Hundred Schools”, also concerns itself with this
concept. In the Book of Lord Shang, Shang Yang reminds the reader that change is part
JANUS.NET, e-journal of International Relations
e-ISSN: 1647-7251
VOL. 16, Nº. 2, TD2
Thematic Dossier - Portugal and China in International Relations: Historical Legacies
and Contemporary Dynamics
February 2026, pp. 55-79
Ideology and Education in China: Portuguese Language Policy at the Intersection
of Statecraft and Strategy
Luís Filipe Pestana, Luís Pires
59
of society and that coercion is the only force capable of leading a knowledgeable people
(Pines, 2023). To construct harmony, therefore, morals are not enough, as Confucianists
would believe. Han Fei who, alongside Shang Yang, is one of the main Legalists, claimed
that morality guided human interaction in the past because it was an era of abundance.
As resources became more limited due to population growth, Han contended, just like
Shang, that coercion was necessary to create harmony Under Heaven. The essence of
this thought led Qin Shihuang’s
2
approach to governance: a highly centralized
government which resulted in brutal takedown of those that deviated from the laws of
the land (Pines, 2000; Pines, 2023)
3
. The argument can also be made that the PRC has
used legalism as a means to achieve harmony. Mao Zedong and his followers believed
that legalists could contribute to the construction of a new nation. The Great Leap
Forward, as Tanrikut (2024) explains, was characterized by a combination of Marxism-
Leninism and legalism.
Finally, Mohism promotes harmony through a combination of impartial concern for those
All Under Heaven and the existence of an authoritarian centralized government backed
up by a bureaucratic system. The leader, as Fraser (2024) indicates, should be
enlightened and guided by virtue. In the eyes of Mohists, education promotes a social
conformity based on ethical principles that everyone will follow. Furthermore, political
issues can be resolved through debate, as dialogue leads to objective solutions (Fraser,
2024).
The Fall of the Qing and the Republican Era (1911-1949)
Different solutions to establish some sort of socio-political order were tried and tested
throughout Chinese history and well into the last years of the Qing dynasty and the
Republican era. Liang Qichao, one of the key modernizers of Chinese sociology, sought
out to prepare the nation for a new era. As such, Liang envisioned a social harmony that
incorporated elements of Western and Chinese thought. As Liu (2020, pp. 65-66) states,
Liang was profoundly influenced by Kang Youwei, his mentor and a great critic of classic
Chinese philosophy, studied Western thinkers including during his academic years in
Japan and followed his mentor in attempting to reform Confucianism. As Jin (2023) points
out, the defeat in the Sino-Japanese War (1895) propelled a young Liang to a path of
modernizing China. Crucially, in 1898, Liang and Kang launched the Hundred Day’s
Reform period, an attempt to save the imperial rule, that ended being suppressed by
conservative forces (Jin, 2023). Nonetheless, this did not mean rejecting the past, on the
contrary. Kang Youweis New Text Confucianism proposed to preserve the essence of
Confucius and Mencius while adapting it to a new political environment. Fairbank (2006,
p. 229) further indicates that Kang wished for Confucianism to become the national
religion of China, a firm commitment to the “new nation’s” connection to its past.
Liang, however, would stray away from his mentor, thanks to his interaction with Yan Fu,
abandoning the idea that Confucianism should be protected at all costs (Liu, 2020: 81-
2
First emperor of the Qin dynasty, Qin Shihuang ruled from 259 to 210 BC.
3
Legalism fell out of favor from the Han dynasty onward
JANUS.NET, e-journal of International Relations
e-ISSN: 1647-7251
VOL. 16, Nº. 2, TD2
Thematic Dossier - Portugal and China in International Relations: Historical Legacies
and Contemporary Dynamics
February 2026, pp. 55-79
Ideology and Education in China: Portuguese Language Policy at the Intersection
of Statecraft and Strategy
Luís Filipe Pestana, Luís Pires
60
83). For Liang, in the end, Chinese philosophy, and Western thought should give way to
a new form of balance and harmony. The end of the imperial era, however, brought
significant changes to the Chinese political sphere.
The fall of the Qing, a dynasty long in decline as evident from the Opium Wars and the
Taiping rebellion (Fairbank & Goldman, 2006, pp. 201-206) gave way to the rise of
republicanism. For Sun Yat-sen it was an opportunity to
“(…) dismantle the Manchu rule that had governed China for more than two
and a half centuries and had become, particularly in the nineteenth century,
an object of scorn and frustration to much of the Chinese citizenry” (Chang
& Gordon, 1991, pp. 21-22).
This was a particularly novel concept in China at the time, considering how industrial
development was at the center of republican policies. As Barrington Moore (1966, pp.
177-178) explains, the urbanization efforts of the early 20th century resulted from the
disintegration of the social order of the countryside and the emergence of commerce in
the coastal areas
4
. For Sun Yat-sen, this served as a basis to create a new form of
nationalism, one that repudiated cosmopolitanism or universalism (Sun, 1924, pp. 26-
28) while drawing inspiration from a distant past. Sun Yat-sen famously repurposed
Tianxia 天下 or All Under Heaven, the Zhou dynasty’s sinocentric cosmos (Zhao, 2019),
calling it Tianxia weigong 天下为公. For Sun, the concept of Great Harmony was relevant,
as Chen (2011) illustrates. A key part of the Book of Rites (Liji 礼记), the Datong 大同
was essential to the socio-political harmony of the past. The Tianxia weigong, as Sun
proposed, was a rebranded version intended to make All Under Heaven serve the people
(Chang & Gordon, 1991, p. 129; Chen, 2011)
The following decades were marked by constant inner turmoil. Yuan Shikai’s rule during
the Beiyang government period was characterized by ever-lasting disputes among
different cliques and warlords (Fairbank & Goldman, 2006, pp. 249-251). By the time
China had finally established itself as a somewhat unified country, the initial pressure and
later invasion by the Japanese Empire meant that the Kuomintang (KMT) leaders would
be incapable of asserting their form of harmony. The situation became even more dire
with the ascension of the CCP as the main rival to the KMT. Once the former defeated the
nationalists, Mao Zedong set his sights to guide the nation to socialism. While the first
few years were distinctively not socialist (Blecher, 2019, p. 155)
5
, similarly to the New
Economy of the Soviet Union, the Great Leap Forward and the Cultural Revolution
repudiated China’s philosophical heritage, Confucianism being particularly targeted as an
enemy of progress. However, a strong argument can be made that legalism did exert
some influence on Mao’s policies, for two main reasons. Firstly, both legalism and Maoism
required strong, centralized and authoritarian leadership. Secondly, the law was
4
Yet, the country was clearly lacking in machinery: of around 20 000 factories, China only possessed 363 with
machines.
5
Up until the Great Leap Forward the Chinese economy retained some elements of capitalism as it was still not
ready to embrace socialism, given its lack of development.
JANUS.NET, e-journal of International Relations
e-ISSN: 1647-7251
VOL. 16, Nº. 2, TD2
Thematic Dossier - Portugal and China in International Relations: Historical Legacies
and Contemporary Dynamics
February 2026, pp. 55-79
Ideology and Education in China: Portuguese Language Policy at the Intersection
of Statecraft and Strategy
Luís Filipe Pestana, Luís Pires
61
supposed to be the main guiding principle, even if it drove to major injustices committed
against the people (Tanrikut, 2025).
The CCP and the Birth of a New State Ideology
Mao Zedong had, thus, formulated his own version of Marxism while retaining a
connection to China’s philosophical past. According to Paul (2021, p. 265), the CCP’s
ideology combines elements of the Communist Manifesto, Leninism, Stalinism, Maoism
and traditional Chinese philosophy. From Leninism, the paramount leader extracted the
party vanguard and violent revolution concepts. However, the lack of an industrial base,
led Mao in search of supporters among peasants. At the time, 89.36% of the Chinese
population lived in the countryside, and only recently this trend has flipped in the opposite
direction (Xinhua, 2019
6
). With the peasantry behind him, Mao embarked on his fight
against oppressive foreign forces. Ideologically, in conclusion, the CCP formed its own
basis fully adapted to the country’s context. Lenin asserted that the Marxist class struggle
was key to achieving a communist society (Touchard, 1961, p. 476 & 495-501), believing
that the proletariat’s power would lead to the fall of the bourgeoisie and, eventually, to a
classless society (Lenin, 1977, pp. 8-9).
For Mao Zedong, it was this combination that allowed to create a sense of unity, both
against the Japanese and the KMT. As such, ideology may have a congregating effect,
and it evolves through time. Arendt (1953, p. 316) defines ideology as the logic of an
idea in constant motion and transformation. This is precisely how it is possible to define
China’s state ideology, that is, a process that has developed through decades with every
leader adding new elements to it, as a response to the specific circumstances of their
time.
Crucially, Mao understood the importance of education as a means of imposing the will
of the CCP. As such, ideological and political education has, since Maoist times, become
a mainstay of the PRC’s education system. Post-1949, the state narrative centered on
the Century of Humiliation (百年国耻 bǎinián guóchǐ), not only as way of reminding the
Chinese people of the oppression at the hands of foreign powers, but also of how classical
thought and old ideas were culprits of the country’s downfall (Wang, 2008, p. 789).
Afterwards, the discourse shifted towards the class struggle. According to Wang (2008,
p.789), the Communist leadership wished to direct the youth’s rage towards the
bourgeoisie and landlords that still dominated and held part of the country’s wealth. And
yet there were concerns that thought would become overly stifled by the CCP’s ideological
guidance. Nikita Kruschev’s attack on Josef Stalin let the Soviet Union to loosen its grip
on the population. Taking note on these developments Mao and Premier Zhou Enlai
launched the Hundred Flowers Movement (1956-1957) intending to encourage
intellectuals to criticize the government and help implement reformed policies. However,
the Campaign ended as soon as criticism became perilous to the Party and its legitimacy
as leading force of the nation. King (2012) accurately states that the subsequent Anti-
6
The rural population in 2018 was 40,42% of the total.
JANUS.NET, e-journal of International Relations
e-ISSN: 1647-7251
VOL. 16, Nº. 2, TD2
Thematic Dossier - Portugal and China in International Relations: Historical Legacies
and Contemporary Dynamics
February 2026, pp. 55-79
Ideology and Education in China: Portuguese Language Policy at the Intersection
of Statecraft and Strategy
Luís Filipe Pestana, Luís Pires
62
Rightist Campaign of 1957 resulted in the re-education or execution of thousands of
critics.
The CCP in this context portrayed itself as the vanguard of the people against the
perceived oppressive forces. The triumph of the Chinese people was tied to the success
of the Party, even when Mao was publicly criticized after his death in 1976. The victorious
CCP was continuously supported by state-led media. The People’s Daily, for instance,
remarked it was crucial to firmly embrace ideological education (抓紧思想教育). Chen
(2021) also explains that this was understood as a necessary effort to find scapegoats
for the countrys backwardness. The traditional targets were, as the author exemplifies,
violent attacks perpetrated by the enemy, Chiang Kai-shek or to stimulate the unity of
the peasantry, the core of the CCP’s class struggle and united front.
The Cultural Revolution further exemplifies how the Mao period pushed for greater
ideological strength in the education system. According to Wang (1975, p. 760), the
education reforms of the time sought to ensure greater “political conscious” of students,
as well as provide training that could be useful to China’s industrial and agricultural
output. For this to be achieved, decision-makers understood that education had to spread
nationwide. However, the re-education of intellectuals placed a massive strain on college
education, as its greatest thinkers were under constant threat of public criticism or of
being sent to villages and factories to work (Chandra, 1987, p. 130). Ideologically, the
regime intended to create a uniform critical mass supported by the lowest strata of
society. When the new enrolment policy was rolled out in 1972, as Leff singles out (2019,
p.12), access to higher education depended on ideological knowledge and not academic
achievements, thus making education subservient to politics. Other reforms were
introduced to enhance the ideological presence in education:
“Along with appointing Communist Party cadres to high ranking
administrative positions in the universities, political ideology dominated the
higher education curriculum. Textbooks used during the Cultural Revolution
were entirely rewritten in accordance to the new political doctrine in place.
The students and faculty members were required to visit the factories and
communes to learn from the laboring class and peasants” (Leff, 2019, p.13).
As mentioned before, ideological education is not a novelty in present-day China. The
Republican authorities, after the fall of the Qing, focused their attention on the Century
of Humiliation. Starting with the first Opium War, this period was marked by the steep
decline of the last imperial dynasty. For about 100 years, foreign powers were responsible
for carving up the Chinese territory under the threat of warfare or imposed via unequal
treaties, the first of which being the treaty of Nanjing (1842) (Lesaffer, 2025). This
discourse continued in Taiwan after the expulsion of the KMT from the mainland (Wang,
2008, p. 789). In search of new targets, the CCP identified the class struggle against
oppressive forces as key to settling the Party as the vanguard. (Wang, 2008, p. 789). In
Beijing, as Peng (2023, pp. 1033-1035) clarifies, there was the perception that there
were certain segments of society still contaminated” by bourgeois education. The
JANUS.NET, e-journal of International Relations
e-ISSN: 1647-7251
VOL. 16, Nº. 2, TD2
Thematic Dossier - Portugal and China in International Relations: Historical Legacies
and Contemporary Dynamics
February 2026, pp. 55-79
Ideology and Education in China: Portuguese Language Policy at the Intersection
of Statecraft and Strategy
Luís Filipe Pestana, Luís Pires
63
resulting policies that the Cultural Revolution heightened the desire to rid the country of
such interference, particularly in urban areas.
Post-1989: Reforming Ideological and Political Education
The year 1989 was a turning point. Deng Xiaoping acknowledged the investment in
ideological education had not sufficed (Zeng, 2016, p. 115). Furthermore, the leading
class of the Party were also fearful of losing legitimacy. After decades of building a
unifying image of themselves, Zhang (2008, p. 788) alludes, the Mandate of Heaven was
on the verge of being led astray.
Chen (2021) broadens this analysis, as the PRC prioritized the implementation of
ideological and political education in the entire teaching process (把思想政治教育贯彻在全
部教育过程中). Deng Xiaoping and the proponents of the Reform and Opening policies paid
little attention to political and ideological education. From the beginning this was
understood as a way of distancing the CCP from the excesses of the past. Now that the
nation was surging because of economic prosperity and non-isolationism, ideology took
the backseat. Callahan (2006, p. 85) determined that between 1947 and 1990 national
humiliation related books were not published. However, the opening of the PRC brought
along a few unintended consequences. Prior to 1989, the lack of focus on the ideological
education was conducive to potential internal instability. This compounded in 1989 with
the events at Tiananmen Square, leaving Deng Xiaoping to conclude that
“one of the greatest failures of the CCP leadership during the Reform and
Opening up period was not considering political-ideological education as a
priority”.
As such, the crackdown on the pro-democracy demonstrations in 1989 resulted in a
renewed ideological fervour with particular focus on the education system. In 1992,
Deng’s Southern Tour was not only devised to relaunch the country’s economy, but also
to assert the CCP’s position as sole representative of the Chinese people. The State
Education Commission published the “Reform and Development of Education in China
Program”. At its core, it highlighted that patriotism should be the most important value
for the PRC. In 1994, 95% of Beijing’s primary and high school students had already
watched patriotic movies recommended by the State Education Commission, as part of
the “Circular on Carrying Out Education of Patriotism for Primary and Secondary Schools
Through Out the Country via Good Films and TV Series” (Zhao, 1998).
Ideological work was, as such, well underway with further contributions from the Ministry
of Education and the Communist Youth League’s Central Committee. New courses were
created, for example, “Marxism Basic Principles” or “Introduction to Maoism and
Theoretical System of Socialism with Chinese Characteristics” (Chen, 2021). Books and
teaching materials were also targeted. Published in April 1990, The Indignation of
National Humiliation served as a remembrance of the events of the First Opium War,
JANUS.NET, e-journal of International Relations
e-ISSN: 1647-7251
VOL. 16, Nº. 2, TD2
Thematic Dossier - Portugal and China in International Relations: Historical Legacies
and Contemporary Dynamics
February 2026, pp. 55-79
Ideology and Education in China: Portuguese Language Policy at the Intersection
of Statecraft and Strategy
Luís Filipe Pestana, Luís Pires
64
reinstating the Century of Humiliation as central to the CCP’s ideological discourse against
domestic and foreign threats (Callahan, 2006, pp. 186-187).
During Hu Jintao’s time as the Secretary General of the CCP, in October 2004 the CCP
Central Committee and the State Council published Opinion on Further Strengthening
and Improvement of Ideological and Political Education for College Students (关于进一步
加强和改进大学生思想政治教育的意见). As Chen (2021) elaborates
“That document stated that “strengthening and improving the ideological and
political education of college students is an extremely urgent and important
task,” and that raising their ideological and political character” was
necessary in order to “cultivate them into the builders and successors of the
socialist cause with Chinese characteristics”.
Nonetheless, ideological education was perceived to have become stagnant. Chen (2021)
confirms this hypothesis by analysing the number of occurrences of the term sizheng
7
, from 1994 to 2021, in the People’s Daily, the CCP’s main media mouthpiece. Of the
766 occurrences, 700 correspond to the time since Xis takeover in 2012. Obedience to
the Party, while crucial, was no longer enough to form harmony and ensure a cohesive,
unified popular front. During Xi Jinping’s stewardship, though, circumstances have
shifted.
Current Ideological Trend Under Xi Jinping
Presently, Xi’s Thought is the last iteration of the PRC’s ideology. Introduced in the CCP
Constitution in 2017, it highlights the historical role of the Party in unifying the people.
As an extension of the path created by Mao Zedong, it encompasses the armed forces,
technological innovation, ecology or the improvement of Chinese people’s livelihood. Its
presence is crucial for Xi and the country’s leadership which, in turn, makes it
fundamentally necessary to be taught at every level of the education system (Xinhua,
2024). In other words, Xi’s thought must be studied and interiorized from an early age
as to ensure that harmony is produced with the Party at the center of the Tianxia.
The CCP, therefore, acted when the new government took power in 2012. One of Xi
Jinpings main objectives as the Paramount Leader of the People’s Republic of China is to
further the efforts of establishing a form of social harmony under the helm of the CCP.
As discussed, the concept of harmony is not foreign or a novelty in the realm of political-
philosophical Chinese thought. However, the Communist rule has presently a clear view
on what that harmony should look like, and it should be at the centre of the order Under
Heaven. As Tatlow suggests (2018), the CCP views itself as the inheritor of the
tianchao 天朝, “heavenly empire, the actual ruling force that governed all matters
Tianxia. President Xi Jinping has embraced his role as the “emperor”. During the
celebration of Confucius’ 2565th anniversary, Xi highlighted that the current ruling class
7
Shortened version of sixiang zhengzhi jiaoyu (思想政治教育) or ideological and political education.
JANUS.NET, e-journal of International Relations
e-ISSN: 1647-7251
VOL. 16, Nº. 2, TD2
Thematic Dossier - Portugal and China in International Relations: Historical Legacies
and Contemporary Dynamics
February 2026, pp. 55-79
Ideology and Education in China: Portuguese Language Policy at the Intersection
of Statecraft and Strategy
Luís Filipe Pestana, Luís Pires
65
is a successor to those responsible for actively promoting Chinese tradition (Tatlow, 2018:
p.6). However, this does not simply mean that China is attempting to replicate the
harmonious society of imperial times. As aforementioned, the ideological fingerprint of
the CCP is ever-present as it promotes a kind of social order with little to no trace of
foreign influence. The Document 9, a communiqué that spread among Party members
in April 2013, offers a deeper glance into the perceived perils exposure to Western ideals.
Broadly speaking, Document 9 outlines seven political threats to the CCP-led harmony,
namely, promoting Western-style constitutional democracy, universal values that weaken
the Party, civil society unrest, neoliberalism, Western-style media, historical nihilism and
negative views on the CCP and New China and putting into question the Reform and
Opening process (ChinaFile, 2013). As such, it called for Party leaders all over the country
to pay close attention to these perceived threats and enhance ideological work through
education. These set of guidelines have, therefore, garnered attention by the Chinese
leadership. Education, as Xi (2014, p. 93) himself declares is an important means to
ensure a harmonious society (Stanzel et al., 2017, pp. 4-7). Teaching materials play a
key role. In August 2021, Han Zhen, head of the Textbook National Committee,
concluded that Xi Jinping’s Thought about Socialism with Chinese Characteristics for the
New Era would become part of basic, vocational and higher education. This statement
came after new guidelines from the Ministry of Education that expected Marxist beliefs
to become stronger among Chinese youth, as well as strengthening the path, theory,
system and culture of socialism with Chinese characteristics (Global Times, 2024).
National unity is crucial for the CCPs national interests and education is at its core, as
the Patriotic Education Law determines (CLT, 2023b).
From a discourse perspective, the ruling party has pushed this concrete narrative as a
means of ensuring not only that the Communist leadership is necessary, but also that
there should be no foreign interference when it comes to domestic issues. Back in 2014,
the General Office of the Party Central Committee and the State Council advocated for
stronger control over the education system (Fu, 2024). Xi clarified, in 2019, during a
speech to professors and educators of political ideology and theory, that political-
ideological education is irreplaceable and bestowed responsibility on educators to
enlighten students in the relevance of socialism with Chinese Characteristics, party
theories, institutions and culture. Fu (2024) clarifies that higher education particularly
targeted
“Specific measures included strengthening political training sessions for
faculty and standardizing textbooks across disciplines, particularly in the
social sciences”.
In 2021, a nationwide inspection was conducted at 31 universities to assess the
effectiveness of ideological teaching. Two top-tier institutions, Tsinghua University and
Peking University, were criticized for their inefficiencies in promoting the CCP’s thought
(Liu, 2021).
Language teaching has also been repeatedly targeted, particularly relating to the
English’s weight in the gaokao, the annual university entry exam. Since 2012 the National
JANUS.NET, e-journal of International Relations
e-ISSN: 1647-7251
VOL. 16, Nº. 2, TD2
Thematic Dossier - Portugal and China in International Relations: Historical Legacies
and Contemporary Dynamics
February 2026, pp. 55-79
Ideology and Education in China: Portuguese Language Policy at the Intersection
of Statecraft and Strategy
Luís Filipe Pestana, Luís Pires
66
People’s Congress (NPC) and the China People’s Political Consultative Conference
(CPPCC) have received proposals to reduce the importance of English when it comes to
evaluating the gaokao (Leung, 2023). While these proposals and opinions have not, for
the most part, translated into actual changes in the college admissions process (Fu, 2024;
Leung, 2023
8
), it signals a growing desire from policymakers to diminish the status of a
foreign subject, while highlighting greater ideological work.
From a legal standpoint, the Chinese government has also set forth a series of laws that
aim to promote national unity. The Patriotic Education Law (CLT, 2023b), approved in
October 2023 and rolled out on January 1st, 2024, is part of broader legislation that
includes the Counter-espionage Law (CLT, 2023a), the revised National Security Law (CLT
2015) and the Hong Kong National Security Law (Lam, 2020). To the Chinese authorities,
these documents intend to create a CCP-led social harmony that isolates society from
external influence.
Of particular relevance to this study, the 2024 Patriotic Education Law (CLT, 2023b)
represents a renewed effort to recentre the role of political and ideological instruction.
Through this legislation, the Chinese Communist Party seeks to cultivate an educational
environment in which students—from kindergarten through university—are
systematically exposed to, and expected to develop proficiency in, Xi Jinping Thought.
As mentioned before, Xi’s presidency has been marked by a thought isolationism as it
pushes away Western liberal democracy values and norms. The rejection of these
elements also extends to democracy in its liberal form. The whole-process people’s
democracy, as showcased in its eponymous white paper (SCIO, 2021), is, from the
Chinese perspective, a more inclusive and direct form of democracy. In short, the election
process in China starts at the local level. From there, elected officials are able to select
members of parliament at municipal level and so forth, up the National People’s Congress,
China’s top legislative body (SCIO, 2021). Candidates are not exclusively members of
the CCP and there have been elected officials from the other nine political parties that
form the United Front.
The Patriotic Education Law derives from government documents, such as the 2016
Ministry of Education directive or the CCP Central Committee and State Council’s 2019
patriotic education directive (Department of Education, 2024), instructing all education
departments of every teaching level at the Provincial tier to implement the patriotic
education. Article 6 of the law explains what patriotic education is:
- CCP’s, New China’s, Reform and Opening, socialism development and Chinese
people’s history;
- socialism with Chinese characteristics system, CCP’s accomplishments and the lived
experience of the people’s unity;
- the Chinese people’s culture, as well as the revolutionary and advanced socialist
cultures;
8
The Beijing government has downgraded English in the gaokao.
JANUS.NET, e-journal of International Relations
e-ISSN: 1647-7251
VOL. 16, Nº. 2, TD2
Thematic Dossier - Portugal and China in International Relations: Historical Legacies
and Contemporary Dynamics
February 2026, pp. 55-79
Ideology and Education in China: Portuguese Language Policy at the Intersection
of Statecraft and Strategy
Luís Filipe Pestana, Luís Pires
67
- basic knowledge of the constitution, national and ethnic unit, national security and
defence;
- martyrs, heroes and model citizen as symbols of the spirit of the people and the spirit
of the times;
- other content rich in patriotic sentiment (CLT, 2023b).
Ideologically, the PRC is invested in ensuring a certain level of uniformity of thought. Yet
the expectations of the Chinese population may be distinctive to what the government
desires, in part, because there is difficulty to change deeply engrained believes. Focusing
on access to higher education, Chinese parents greatly invest in guaranteeing that their
children have a better chance of reaching of the top universities of the country. Besides
extra classes, even during weekends, guardians enroll students in extra-curricular
activities from music to sports, in an attempt to give an edge to these students.
Conversely, some policies go against the parents’ interests. The double reduction (双减政
shuāng jiǎn zhèng ) which sought to alleviate the number of extracurricular classes
and the amount of homework given to school students, ended up with several private
tutoring institutions ceasing operations (Zhao, Shi & Wang, 2024). This, in turn, led
parents to seek alternatives in the black market.
Furthermore, the State Council has tried to condition what career path the Chinese youth
may choose which, in turn, only leads to more panic among parents. The high school
entry exams, zhongkao (中考), have become increasingly subject of attention. In July
2023, 15,4 million students took part in this examination and only 50% of the examinees
were allowed to move on to “regularhigh schools that lead to university. The bottom
half either entered the job market or chose vocational training (Li, 2023). However, fear
of failure is a systemic issue in Chinese society, as Liu (2020) explains, given that there
is a focus on the “science of success” (chenggong cue 成功) as a counterpoint to the
“science of failure” (shibai xue 失败学).
For the CCP, adapting to the market conditions does not seem to eliminate the necessity
of promoting stronger unity through ideology. Major developments in AI, digital literacy
and STEM (Global Times, 2024) are examples of such a statement. The STEM Education
Action Plan 2029, launched in 2018, promotes better training of educators to use STEM
tools in their teaching and train future teachers (Hu, 2024: 77 e 78), while integrating
moral values in their practice (Global Times, 2024).
Yet this does not eliminate a series of challenges that any society is facing with the advent
of Artificial Intelligence. According to Yang (2021), 70% of what is taught in college can
be learned more efficiently by AI. The author considers that this technology has forced
Chinese leaders and society, described as a stable and static status quo, to revolutionize
its education system. In essence, social harmony is now facing new trials.
As a response, the CCO Central Committee and the State Council have already begun to
act. In January 2025, the new 2035 education action plan was presented and includes
strong political and ideological leadership, talent competitiveness, scientific and
technological basis, welfare assurances, social synergy and international influence.
Education Vice-minister Wu Yuan stated that in September 2024 that 1673 new
JANUS.NET, e-journal of International Relations
e-ISSN: 1647-7251
VOL. 16, Nº. 2, TD2
Thematic Dossier - Portugal and China in International Relations: Historical Legacies
and Contemporary Dynamics
February 2026, pp. 55-79
Ideology and Education in China: Portuguese Language Policy at the Intersection
of Statecraft and Strategy
Luís Filipe Pestana, Luís Pires
68
bachelors degrees were established, while 1670 were suppressed for not being in tune
with the PRC’s strategic goals and the country’s social and economic development. Since
2012, 21000 bachelor’s degrees have been created, as opposed to 12000 that were
suspended or cancelled in the same period (Xinhua, 2025). In this year’s Two Sessions,
the discourse focused on innovation and talent attraction capable of producing native
technology, while reducing foreign dependency and incorporating Xi’s Thought in the
education system.
The generation that reached adulthood during XI’s time in power (post-1990) has
experienced the brunt of China’s social issues that are now widespread. The CCP, in its
effort to create a social harmony firmly distinct from the West, has used ideology to fuel
the fight against child obesity, effeminate masculinity, LGBT movements and feminism.
However, the real-world problems that young college graduates tackle daily, from
dwindling wages to high unemployment rates, has at times driven the citizens meant to
be the future of the country to certain behaviours contrary to what the CCP expects.
Cultural and social phenomena, such as “lay flator “let it rot” (Lu, 2024), encapsulate
the youth’s state of desperation and willingness to embrace indifference regarding their
future.
Language Policy and Foreign Language Education in China
Language, Ideology, and the Chinese State
Within the ideological apparatus that has long underpinned Chinese education, foreign
language instruction occupies a highly strategic position. Rather than representing
intercultural openness, it has been governed by the political logics of state-building and
ideological regulation, the evolving and shifting priorities of the state, that consistently
subordinate linguistic and cultural exchange to national interest, that is, as a means of
acquiring useful knowledge to support developmental objectives. (Mao & Min, 2004; Gil,
2016) Ultimately, foreign language education in China is functionally open but
ideologically bounded. As Ricento (2006) argues, language policy always reflects
underlying power structures.
This relationship is articulated through the concept of ‘language import and export’ (Pires,
2024), which situates language education within the broader framework of the political
economy of language (Grin, 2006) and foreign language planning (Payne, 2007). In this
view, foreign languages are imported as strategic resources (Ruíz, 1984) that serve
national goals in diplomacy, trade, and technological advancement, yet are carefully
managed to prevent ideological disruption. Conversely, exporting national languages
functions as a means of projecting soft power and enhancing international status.
Through such linguistic exchanges, states seek to accumulate both material and symbolic
capital, positioning language not merely as a medium of communication but as an
instrument of political influence and global prestige.
As we will see in more detail below, the case of Portuguese language education (PLE) in
China exemplifies this dynamic. Introduced in the early 1960s, its institutionalization was
driven not by organic academic interest or cultural proximity, but by geopolitical needs
JANUS.NET, e-journal of International Relations
e-ISSN: 1647-7251
VOL. 16, Nº. 2, TD2
Thematic Dossier - Portugal and China in International Relations: Historical Legacies
and Contemporary Dynamics
February 2026, pp. 55-79
Ideology and Education in China: Portuguese Language Policy at the Intersection
of Statecraft and Strategy
Luís Filipe Pestana, Luís Pires
69
and ideological alignment. Its expansion has tracked closely with China’s global
positioning and state priorities, from its engagement with Lusophone liberation
movements in the Cold War era to its pursuit of new strategic partnerships in the 21st
century.
Historical Trajectories: From the 19th Century to 1949
The emergence of foreign language education in China was not the result of voluntary
openness but of external pressure (Feng & Adamson, 2019). It began in the 19th century,
following a series of military defeats that underscored the need for urgent modernization.
Western languages, especially English, became strategic tools for accessing scientific and
technical knowledge from abroad. Yet this engagement was deeply ambivalent. While
foreign expertise was needed, the threat of ideological subversion loomed large.
The Self-Strengthening Movement of the late Qing period embodied this tension. As
Adamson (2002, p. 234) explains, its guiding slogan - “study China for morality, the West
for utility” - reflected a model of selective appropriation: foreign languages were
embraced only to the extent that they served national development. Language was
treated as a neutral medium, stripped of cultural depth, and valued purely for its
functional utility. This instrumental logic persisted into the Republican era. According to
Feng & Adamson (2019), while government policies encouraged foreign language
learning to support scientific and technical advancement, they also coexisted with waves
of cultural protectionism and antiforeignism. Throughout this period, language policy
privileged strategic benefit over intercultural dialogue, a framework that would carry
through the foundational decades of the PRC.
Portuguese Language Education Under the People’s Republic
The early decades of the People’s Republic saw the consolidation of foreign language
education as a state-directed and ideologically mediated endeavour. Portuguese, in
particular, entered the curriculum not through linguistic diversity initiatives, but through
Cold War-era foreign policy recalibrations, where Russian was initially the privileged
language (Ning, 2021). Following the Sino-Soviet split, China intensified engagement
with Africa and Latin America, many of whose liberation movements operated in
Portuguese. This led to a targeted need for specialists who could serve state objectives
abroad.
In 1960, the first formal Portuguese language program was launched at the Beijing
Broadcasting Institute, selected for its role in external propaganda rather than linguistic
prestige. That same year, the Beijing Institute of Foreign Languages initiated a short-
term intensive course in Portuguese, later expanded to a full degree. These programs
were designed to produce translators, journalists, and diplomats for use in state media
and foreign service, often tied directly to ideological dissemination (Li, 2012). Training
was also carried out in Macao under the auspices of the Nam Kwong Commercial
Company, illustrating the strategic use of external sites for politically aligned language
JANUS.NET, e-journal of International Relations
e-ISSN: 1647-7251
VOL. 16, Nº. 2, TD2
Thematic Dossier - Portugal and China in International Relations: Historical Legacies
and Contemporary Dynamics
February 2026, pp. 55-79
Ideology and Education in China: Portuguese Language Policy at the Intersection
of Statecraft and Strategy
Luís Filipe Pestana, Luís Pires
70
instruction (Choi, 2012). These efforts culminated in the 1964 “3000 Talents Plan”, a
seven-year initiative to build diplomatic translation capacity in key foreign languages.
However, the Cultural Revolution (19661976) brought a dramatic reversal. Foreign
languages were recast as vehicles of ideological contamination, and institutions where
foreign languages were taught were denounced as counter-revolutionary (Li, 2012).
Language programs were suspended, foreign materials banned, and trained professionals
side-lined. As Mao & Min (2004) note, this period exemplifies the cyclical, even pendular,
nature of Chinese language policy, where moments of pragmatic openness give way to
ideological retrenchment.
Rehabilitation of foreign language teaching began cautiously in the 1970s, in tandem with
China’s re-entry into global diplomacy. Portuguese programs resumed in Beijing and
Shanghai, though their expansion remained limited and ideologically constrained. By the
1990s, Portuguese remained marginal, confined to a few institutions and serving
narrowly defined state purposes. As Li (2015) observes, this long stagnation would be
abruptly broken in the 2000s by a ‘volcanic eruption’, that is, an explosive growth of the
number of students and courses of Portuguese in China’s higher education.
Contemporary Developments and Enduring Structures
The 21st century witnessed a sharp turn in Portuguese language education. Between
2000 and 2020, the number of universities offering Portuguese in Mainland China rose
from three to over forty (André, 2019; Pires, 2022; Jatobá, 2020). This shift was
catalysed by several overlapping factors: China’s accession to the WTO; the emergence
of Brazil and Angola as strategic partners; the founding of Forum Macao in 2003; and
new educational policies encouraging universities to diversify their degree offerings (Ye,
2014; Castelo & Ye, 2020). Portuguese suddenly became attractive due to its perceived
market value and low initial institutional cost. Yet this growth occurred without a formal
guiding policy. As Jatobá (2020, p. 184) argues, it amounted to a “tacit policy”, shaped
more by political and economic signals than by educational planning. This flexibility
allowed rapid expansion, but also introduced problems of quality control, faculty training,
and curricular fragmentation (Ye, 2014; Liu, 2017).
Even as market responsiveness increased, the ideological framing of language education
remained intact. Policy documents continued to stress alignment with national priorities.
Portuguese was promoted not for its cultural richness, but for its strategic usefulness.
Decisions like the 2011 withdrawal of preferential exam policies reinforced the message
that language programs would be supported only as long as they served state-defined
goals (Liu, 2017). This expansion also revealed structural asymmetries. As of 2023, over
half hundred institutions in Mainland China and its SARs offered Portuguese courses
(Pires, 2024), with estimates of student enrolment range between 5,100 and 6,400, and
about 300 teachers nationwide. (Pires, 2022; Castelo & Ye, 2020). Yet staffing levels,
academic qualifications, and postgraduate opportunities vary widely. As of 2020, only 6%
of Mainland teachers held doctorates, compared to a more qualified and experienced
teaching corps in Macao (Castelo & Ye, 2020).
JANUS.NET, e-journal of International Relations
e-ISSN: 1647-7251
VOL. 16, Nº. 2, TD2
Thematic Dossier - Portugal and China in International Relations: Historical Legacies
and Contemporary Dynamics
February 2026, pp. 55-79
Ideology and Education in China: Portuguese Language Policy at the Intersection
of Statecraft and Strategy
Luís Filipe Pestana, Luís Pires
71
Macao occupies a pivotal position as both a geopolitical bridge and an academic centre
within China’s Portuguese language education system. Yet, until 1999, Portuguese was
the language of the ruling class, public services and Law (Teixeira e Silva & Lima-
Hernandes, 2014, pp. 63 & 64). Cheng (2020, p. 186) states that there was no defined
language policy in Macao during Portuguese rule. More than four centuries of rule had
only led to the creation of two separate societies. As Cheng (2020, p. 187) further points
out:
“(…), the influence of the Portuguese language hardly spread beyond the
public domain. In other fields, such as commerce, education and cultural life,
Portuguese was not commonly used in Macao society, either because the
Portuguese administration deliberately refrained from making Portuguese the
official language outside government business, or because governmental
inefficiency impeded the expansion of the official language policy beyond the
public domain”.
However, the local government did make significant advances during the 1990s that
greatly impacted Portuguese language teaching to this day. The creation of the University
of Macau and the Polytechnic Institute of Macao (now Polytechnic University of Macao) is
still seen as having an impact in the competitiveness of those that learn Portuguese
(Teixeira e Silva & Lima-Hernandes, 2014, pp. 70). Furthermore, the Macao Special
Administrative Region’s is based on the Portuguese one. Cheng (2020, p. 197) further
states it is necessary for the legal system to remain bilingual, as a way of not only
remembering the territory’s history but also of protecting the Portuguese language.
Its institutions provide structured professional development for Mainland instructors
through master’s and doctoral programs, intensive summer training, interpretation
courses, and scholarly conferences. These institutions also act as instruments of cultural
diplomacy, operationalizing Macao’s formal role as China’s designated platform for
Lusophone cooperation. In this dual capacity, Macao integrates educational leadership
with strategic function, aligning language education initiatives with Beijing’s broader soft
power objectives, particularly within the framework of the Belt and Road Initiative.
From Language Policy to Ideological Control
Despite quantitative gains, significant challenges remain. The absence of standardized
curricula, the uneven distribution of faculty expertise, and reliance on Macao all point to
the fragility of the system. As in earlier decades, foreign language education remains a
tool of statecraft: flexible in form, but rigid in function. Locals identify more closely with
the PRC (Geddes, 2020), an element that is present even among younger generations.
Li, Ieong, Wong et. al. (2025, pp. 566 & 567) found that University of Macau students
have an easier time accepting the official ideology of the CCP, as well as balancing the
existence of a national identity that does not eliminate the presence of a local identity.
The authors also signal to the fact the current circumstances are not static:
JANUS.NET, e-journal of International Relations
e-ISSN: 1647-7251
VOL. 16, Nº. 2, TD2
Thematic Dossier - Portugal and China in International Relations: Historical Legacies
and Contemporary Dynamics
February 2026, pp. 55-79
Ideology and Education in China: Portuguese Language Policy at the Intersection
of Statecraft and Strategy
Luís Filipe Pestana, Luís Pires
72
“Notably, as the Hong Kong and Macao governments actively promote
patriotic education, which has been significantly shaped by the official
ideology in Mainland China in recent years, this spectrum pattern is better
treated as dynamic rather than static, as it may change over time. This
spectrum pattern could provide insights for school stakeholders to rethink
how to better equip youths for the complex world through patriotic education
(Li Ieong, Wong et. al., 2025, pp. 567 & 568).
Patriotic education, therefore, is viewed as key element to promoting national unity
through the Xi Jinping thought. In 2024 the local government announced that new
courses would be offered at Macao schools to foster a strong national with China, as well
as promote “excellent Chinese culture” (Pereira, 2024; The Macao News, 2024). Then
chief executive Ho Iat Seng stated that the Patriotic Education Law would ensure national
security and the without it, Macao would not continue in its path of development and
solidity (Pereira, 2023). His words have been closely replicated, through calls to use
patriotic materials in strengthen Macao’s integration with the Greater Bay Area region
(Ho, 2025) and to increase education investment as a way of not only spearheading
technological development, but also construction of a stable national identity.
Other institutions have responded to the governments push to embrace patriotic
education as a crucial part in solidifying Macanese society and integrating into the CCPs
tianxia. The Women’s General Association of Macao, for instance, called the local
government to commit to promoting patriotic education among young people (Marques,
2025), as a way a solidifying the patriotic spirit the Macanese people with the framework
of the “One Country, Two Systems” (Newsdesk, 2024).
History has been at the core of the discussion. Beijing’s intent revolves around creating
a narrative that not only reminds Macao and Hong Kong youths of the country’s past
under foreign oppression but also attempts to generate a stronger sense of belonging to
China under the help of the CCP. Production of teaching materials, for instance, was a
point of contention. Macao SAR DSEDJ, since 2019, has encouraged schools to adopt
history manuals produced by the People’s Education Press, a Mainland China publisher.
Several academics questioned whether this would limit a more pluralistic comprehension
of history (JTM, 2016).
Conclusion
Stemming from centuries of tradition, the CCP has attempted to create a new form of
social harmony. Based on Xis Thought, the PRC intends to create a space where the
Communist leadership is placed at the centre. These efforts are not new since 1949 and
yet Xi’s presidency has pushed ideological and political education further than previous
generations of Communist rulers. Universities have been particularly targeted leading to
greater insularity from the outside world. Nonetheless, there is still a disconnect between
the ideological objectives of the state and the needs and concerns of Chinese youth. High
unemployment and a lack of willingness to engage in the “rat race” that is required to
JANUS.NET, e-journal of International Relations
e-ISSN: 1647-7251
VOL. 16, Nº. 2, TD2
Thematic Dossier - Portugal and China in International Relations: Historical Legacies
and Contemporary Dynamics
February 2026, pp. 55-79
Ideology and Education in China: Portuguese Language Policy at the Intersection
of Statecraft and Strategy
Luís Filipe Pestana, Luís Pires
73
reach a high-status position in society counteract the CCP’s intention of having a cohesive
force moving in the same direction. Furthermore, greater investment in fields like STEM
and AI places greater pressure on language courses to become attractive to young college
students.
The case of Portuguese in China exemplifies the intersection between foreign language
education and geopolitical strategy. From its marginal beginnings as a tool of diplomatic
necessity to its current status as a language of opportunity and employability, Portuguese
has found a distinct space within China’s linguistic landscape. Its continued success will
depend on sustained investment, institutional collaboration, and the evolving priorities of
China’s engagement with the Lusophone world.
At the same time, this trajectory highlights a critical insight for international language
policy: the promotion of a foreign language, whether for cultural outreach, soft power, or
commercial gain, cannot be disentangled from the ideological and institutional structures
of the host country. In China, where language planning is tightly coupled with political
priorities, foreign language education remains a carefully managed enterprise. The
development of Portuguese has advanced not through cultural affinity, but through
strategic calibration - serving diplomatic, commercial, and ideological functions within
China’s state-led educational framework. For Portugal, this underscores the need for
foreign policy and language promotion strategies that are attuned to the recipient
country’s political economy and ideological parameters.
In this regard, Macao holds particular relevance. As both a symbolic link and an
operational platform, Macao facilitates the linguistic and institutional bridge between
China and the Lusophone world. Its comparative academic strength, cultural familiarity,
and geopolitical positioning make it a critical node for expanding Portuguese language
education in East Asia. More broadly, the case of Portuguese in China offers a window
into the complex interplay between language, ideology, and international relations, an
interplay that defines, and will continue to shape, the evolving dynamic between Portugal,
China, and the wider Lusophone sphere.
References
Adamson, B. (2002). Barbarian as a foreign language: English in China’s schools. World
Englishes, 21(2), 231243. https://doi.org/10.1111/1467-971x.00244
Adamson, B. (2004). China’s English: A history of English in Chinese education. Hong
Kong University Press.
André, C. A. (2019). Ensino do Português na China: Um Breve Balanço. In Y. Zhang, S.
Augusto, & A. Castelo (Eds.), Produção de Materiais Didácticos para o Ensino de PLE no
contexto da China e Ásia-Pacífico (pp. 35–44). Instituto Politécnico de Macao.
Blecher, Marc (2019). New Democracy. In Christian Sorace, Ivan Franceschini, and
Nicholas Loubere (eds.). Afterlives of Chinese Communism: Political Concepts from Mao
to Xi: 155-159. London: Verso
JANUS.NET, e-journal of International Relations
e-ISSN: 1647-7251
VOL. 16, Nº. 2, TD2
Thematic Dossier - Portugal and China in International Relations: Historical Legacies
and Contemporary Dynamics
February 2026, pp. 55-79
Ideology and Education in China: Portuguese Language Policy at the Intersection
of Statecraft and Strategy
Luís Filipe Pestana, Luís Pires
74
Callahan, William A. (2006). History, identity, and security: Producing and consuming
nationalism in China. Critical Asian Studies, 38(2): 179208.
https://doi.org/10.1080/14672710600671087
Castelo, A., & Ye, S. (2020). Capítulo II Retrato atual do ensino e certificação de PLNM
no ensino superior da China. In Z. Yunfeng, I. Poço Lopes, & A. Castelo (Coord.), Livro
Azul - Relatório sobre o Ensino do Português em Instituições de Ensino Superior da China
(1960-2020) (pp. 21-72). Universidade Politécnica de Macao.
http://hdl.handle.net/10400.2/13054
Chandra, Nirmal Kumar. (1987). Education in China: From the Cultural Revolution to
Four Modernisations. Economic and Political Weekly, 22(19/21), AN121AN136.
http://www.jstor.org/stable/4377015
Chang, Sidney H. & Gordon, H. D. Leonard (1991). Under Heaven…Sun Yat-sen and His
Revolutionary Thought. Stanford (California): Hoover Institution Press
Chen, Albert H.Y. (2014). The Concept of Datong in Chinese Philosophy as an
Expression of the Idea of the Common Good. In Solomon, D., Lo, P. (eds) The Common
Good: Chinese and American Perspectives. Philosophical Studies in Contemporary
Culture, vol 23. Dordrecht: Springer. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-94-007-7272-4_5
Chen, Guying (2018). The Daoist Notion of Harmony. In Chen Guying. The Humanist
Spirit of Daoism. Brill, 42-60
Chen, Stella (2021). Ideological and Political Education - The CMP Dictionary. China Media
Project. Retrieved from https://chinamediaproject.org/the_ccp_dictionary/ideological-
and-political-education/
Cheng, Tong Io (2020). Linguistic Pluralism and the Legal System of Macao. Journal of
International and Comparative Law. 7:1 JICL 183198
ChinaFile (2013). Document 9: A ChinaFile Translation. ChinaFile. Retrieved from
https://www.chinafile.com/document-9-chinafile-translation
China Keywords (2024). “Harmony without Uniformity”. The State Council Information
Office The People’s Republic of China. Retrieved from
http://english.scio.gov.cn/featured/chinakeywords/2024-
08/30/content_117397216.htm
Choi, W. H. (2012). Desenvolver vantagens linguísticas e culturais e converter Macau
num centro de ensino de português na China. In Choi W. H. & Zhao H. (Eds.), Atas do
1.º Fórum Internacional de Ensino de Língua Portuguesa na China (pp. 43-50). Instituto
Politécnico de Macau.
CLT (2015). “National Security Law”. China Law Translate. Retrieved from
https://www.chinalawtranslate.com/2015nsl/
CLT (2023a). Counter-espionage Law of the P.R.C. (2023 ed.). China Law Translate.
Retrieved from https://www.chinalawtranslate.com/en/counter-espionage-law-2023/
CLT (2023b). Patriotic Education Law. China Law Translate. Retrieved from
https://www.chinalawtranslate.com/en/patriotic-education-law/
JANUS.NET, e-journal of International Relations
e-ISSN: 1647-7251
VOL. 16, Nº. 2, TD2
Thematic Dossier - Portugal and China in International Relations: Historical Legacies
and Contemporary Dynamics
February 2026, pp. 55-79
Ideology and Education in China: Portuguese Language Policy at the Intersection
of Statecraft and Strategy
Luís Filipe Pestana, Luís Pires
75
Department of Education (2024). Patriotic Education Law of China. Australian
Government. Retrieved from https://www.education.gov.au/international-education-
engagement/resources/patriotic-education-law-china
Fairbank, John King & Goldman, Merle (2006). China: A New History. Cambridge: The
Belknap Press of Harvard University Press
Feng, A., & Adamson, B. (2019). Language Policies in Education in the People’s Republic
of China. In A. Kirkpatrick, & A. J. Liddicoat, The Routledge International Handbook of
Language Education Policy in Asia. Routledge. https://doi.org/10.4324/9781315666235-
4
Fraser, Chris (2024). Mohism. In Edward N. Zalta & Uri Nodelman (eds.), The Stanford
Encyclopedia of Philosophy (Fall 2024 Edition) Retrieved from
https://plato.stanford.edu/entries/mohism/
Geddes, Thomas des Garets (2020). As Hong Kong rebels, why is Macay so quiet?
Mercator Institute for China Studies. Retrieved from
https://merics.org/en/comment/hong-kong-rebels-why-macau-so-quiet
Gil, J. (2016). English language education policies in the People’s Republic of China. In R.
Kirkpatrick (Ed.), English language education policy in Asia (pp. 49–90). Springer.
https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-22464-0_3
Global Times (2024). China to strengthen AI education in primary, secondary schools.
Global Times. Retrieved from https://www.globaltimes.cn/page/202412/1324230.shtml
Grin, F. (2006). Economic Considerations in Language Policy. In T. Ricento (Ed.), An
Introduction to Language Policy: Theory and Method (pp. 77–94). Blackwell.
Hing, Sonny Lo Shiu (2020). The Politics of Education Reform in Hong Kong.
Macaubusiness.com Retrieved from https://www.macaubusiness.com/opinion-the-
politics-of-education-reform-in-hong-kong/
Hing, Sonny Lo Shiu (2021). Chinese Nationalism and Hong Kong’s Curriculum Reform.
Macaubusiness.com Retrieved from https://www.macaubusiness.com/opinion-chinese-
nationalism-and-hong-kongs-curriculum-reform/
Ho, Ion Sang (2025). Aprofundar e consolidar a educação patriótica. Região
Administrativa Especial de Macau Assembleia Legislativa. Retrieved from
https://al.gov.mo/uploads/attachment/2025-06/86236684a9c47ea4fb.pdf
Hu, Hongyong (2023). Development of STEM Education in China. Advances in Social
Science, Education and Humanities Research. 741: 75-88. DOI:
10.2991/978-2-38476-040-4_8
Jatobá, J. R. (2020). Política e Planejamento Linguístico na China: Promoção e Ensino da
Língua Portuguesa [Tese de Doutoramento, Universidade de Macau]. Proquest.
Jin, Emily Xueni (2023). How Liang Qichao Rewrote China’s Future. Sixth Tone. Retrieved
from https://www.sixthtone.com/news/1012660
JANUS.NET, e-journal of International Relations
e-ISSN: 1647-7251
VOL. 16, Nº. 2, TD2
Thematic Dossier - Portugal and China in International Relations: Historical Legacies
and Contemporary Dynamics
February 2026, pp. 55-79
Ideology and Education in China: Portuguese Language Policy at the Intersection
of Statecraft and Strategy
Luís Filipe Pestana, Luís Pires
76
JTM (2016). Manual de História pode criar “lavagem cerebral”. Jornal Tribuna de Macau.
Retrieved from https://jtm.com.mo/local/manual-de-historia-pode-criar-lavagem-
cerebral/
King, Gilbert (2012). The Silence that Preceded China’s Great Leap into Famine.
Smithsonian magazine. Retrieved from https://www.smithsonianmag.com/history/the-
silence-that-preceded-chinas-great-leap-into-famine-51898077/
Lam, Carrie (2020). "Promulgation of National Law 2020". The Government of the Hong
Kong Special Administrative Region Gazette (in Chinese). Vol. 24, no. 44.
Leff, Anastasia A. (2019). The Impact of Interrupted Education on Earnings: The Case of
China’s Cultural Revolution. [Senior Thesis, The Faculty of the Department of Economics
– Bates College]
Leung, Mimi (2023). “Push to reduce the weighting of English in China’s gaokao exam”.
University World News. Retrieved from
https://www.universityworldnews.com/post.php?story=20230315140303295#:~:text=
The%20Education%20Ministry%20in%20Beijing%20said%20unequivocally%20last%2
0September%20that,of%20English%20in%20the%20gaokao.
Lesaffer, Randall (2025). Nanjing (1842): Unequal Treaties and the Right to War. Oxford
Public International Law. Retrieved from https://opil.ouplaw.com/page/943
Li, C. (2008). “The Philosophy of Harmony in Classical Confucianism”. Philosophy
Compass, 3(3): 423435. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1747-9991.2008.00141.x
Li, C. (2012). Ensino da língua portuguesa na República Popular da China durante a
década de 60 do culo XX. In Choi W. H. & Zhao H. (Eds.), Atas do 1.º Fórum
Internacional de Ensino de Língua Portuguesa na China. Instituto Politécnico de Macau.
Li, C. (2015). Nova expansão da língua portuguesa na China. In C. A. André & LI C.
(Eds.), Actas do 2.º Fórum Internacional do Ensino da Língua Portuguesa na China (pp.
51-74). Instituto Politécnico de Macau.
Li, C. (2018). Inspiração histórica: o ensino da língua portuguesa e a China moderna. In
C. A. André, R. Pereira, & L. Inverno (Eds.), Actas do 4.º Fórum Internacional do Ensino
de Língua Portuguesa na China (pp. 3-22). Instituto Politécnico de Macau.
Li, H., Ieong, M.U., Wong, K.L.L. et al. (2025). University students’ concepts of nation in
Mainland China, Hong Kong, and Macau: Patriotism or nationalism?. High Educ 89, 553–
569. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10734-024-01235-9
Li, Yuan (2023). China’s Young People Can’t Find Jobs. Xi Jinping Says to ‘Eat Bitterness.
The New York Times. Retrieved from www.nytimes.com/2023/05/30/business/china-
youth-unemployment.html
Liu, G. (2017). Estratégias Utilizadas por Aprendentes de Português Língua Estrangeira:
Estudantes Universitários Falantes de Língua Materna Chinesa [Tese de Doutoramento,
Universidade de Lisboa]. Repositório ULisboa.
JANUS.NET, e-journal of International Relations
e-ISSN: 1647-7251
VOL. 16, Nº. 2, TD2
Thematic Dossier - Portugal and China in International Relations: Historical Legacies
and Contemporary Dynamics
February 2026, pp. 55-79
Ideology and Education in China: Portuguese Language Policy at the Intersection
of Statecraft and Strategy
Luís Filipe Pestana, Luís Pires
77
Liu, Jing (2021). Chinese universities ticked off for ideological education ‘gaps’. Times
Higher Education Retrieved from https://www.timeshighereducation.com/news/chinese-
universities-ticked-ideological-education-gaps
Liu, Shaojie (2020). Origin and Expansion of Chinese Sociology. Beijing: China Renmin
University Press
Liu, Yu (2020). My Daughter is Inexorably Becoming an Ordinary Person. Reading the
China Dream. Retrieved from https://www.readingthechinadream.com/liu-yu-on-the-
arms-race-in-chinese-education.html
Lu, Shen (2024). China’s Youth Are Quitting the Rat Race to ‘Let It Rot’”. The Wall Street
Journal. Retrieved from https://www.wsj.com/story/chinas-youth-are-quitting-the-rat-
race-to-let-it-rot-6ba97f88
Mao, L., & Min, Y. (2004). Language Policy in the People’s Republic of China, Theory and
Practice Since 1949. In H. Sun & M. Zhou (Eds.), Language policy in the People’s Republic
of China: Theory and practice since 1949 (pp. 319329). https://doi.org/10.1007/1-
4020-8039-5_18
Marques, Renato (2025). Women’s Association elects more patriotic education as a
priority for 2025. Macau Daily Times. Retrieved from URL:
https://macaudailytimes.com.mo/womens-association-elects-more-patriotic-education-
as-a-priority-for-2025.html
Ning, Q. (2021). The interaction of foreign languages and society: A review of Russian
language education in China. Onomázein, (Special Issue 9), 20
37. https://doi.org/10.7764/onomazein.ne9.02
Moore Jr., Barrington (1966). Social Origins of Dictatorship and Democracy: Lord and
Peasant in the Making of the Modern World. Harmondsworth: Penguin University Books
Newsdesk (2023). NPC adopts new patriotic education law, act to be promoted in HK,
Macau. Macaubusiness.com. Retrieved from https://www.macaubusiness.com/npc-
adopts-new-patriotic-education-law-act-to-be-promoted-in-hk-macau/
Paul, G. (2021). “From Marx and Engels to Sino-Marxism Focusing on Communist and
Confucian (rujia) Notions of Loyalty and Self-Criticism”. Asian Studies, 9(1): 263280.
https://doi.org/10.4312/as.2021.9.1.263-280
Payne, M. (2007). Foreign language planning: Towards a supporting
framework. Language Problems and Language Planning, 31(3), 235–256.
https://doi.org/10.1075/lplp.31.3.03pay
Peng, L. (2023). A History of China in the 20th Century. Singapore: Springer Nature Pte
Ltd. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-981-99-0734-2_9
Pereira, Catarina (2023). RAEM implementará Lei de Educação Patriótica. Jornal Tribuna
de Macau. [Online]. Retrieved from https://jtm.com.mo/local/raem-
implementara-lei-de-educacao-patriotica/
JANUS.NET, e-journal of International Relations
e-ISSN: 1647-7251
VOL. 16, Nº. 2, TD2
Thematic Dossier - Portugal and China in International Relations: Historical Legacies
and Contemporary Dynamics
February 2026, pp. 55-79
Ideology and Education in China: Portuguese Language Policy at the Intersection
of Statecraft and Strategy
Luís Filipe Pestana, Luís Pires
78
Pereira, Catarina (2024). Alteradas competências académicas com reforço de elementos
“patrióticos”. Jornal Tribuna de Macau. Retrieved from
https://jtm.com.mo/local/alteradas-competencias-academicas-reforco-
de-elementos-patrioticos/
Pines, Yuri (2000). “‘The One That Pervades the All’ in Ancient Chinese Political thought:
The Origins of ‘The Great Unity’ Paradigm,” T’oung Pao 86 (45): 280324.
Pines, Yuri (2023). Legalism in Chinese Philosophy. In Edward N. Zalta & Uri
Nodelman (eds.). The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy (Summer 2023
Edition) [Online]. Retrieved from https://plato.stanford.edu/entries/chinese-legalism/
Pires, M. D. (2022). Português na China: os números do ensino superior. Revista Thema,
21(3), 602614. https://doi.org/10.15536/thema.v21.2022.602-614.2442
Pires, L. T. A. (2024). Análise do atual planeamento e políticas de português ngua
estrangeira na China: comparação com o caso do espanhol língua estrangeira e
recomendações para planeamento e políticas articuladas. Doctorate Thesis, Portuguese
Studies. Política de Língua. Universidade Aberta, Portugal.
http://hdl.handle.net/10400.2/15852
Ricento, T. (Ed.) (2006). An Introduction to Language Policy: Theory and Method.
Blackwell.
Ruíz, R. (1984) Orientations in Language Planning. NABE Journal 8(2), 15-34.
http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/08855072.1984.10668464
SCIO (2021). “Full text: China: Democracy That Works”. The State Council Information
Office The People’s Republic of China. Retrieved from
http://english.scio.gov.cn/whitepapers/2021-12/04/content_77908921.htm
Stanzel, Angela et al. (2017). China’s “New Era” with Xi Jinping Characteristics. European
Council on Foreign Relations. Retrieved from https://ecfr.eu/wp-content/
uploads/ECFR240_China_Analysis_Party_Congress_Ideology_2.pdf
Tanrikut, Mevlan (2025). Mao Zedong and Legalism: A Lifelong Defense of a Classical
Chinese Philosophy. Doğu Asya Araştırmaları Dergisi, 8 (15): 38-62.
Tatlow, Didi Kirsten (2018). “China’s Cosmological Communism: A Challenge to Liberal
Democracies Imperial philosophy meets Marxist orthodoxy in Beijing’s global
ambitions”. Mercator Institute for China Studies. Retrieved from
https://merics.org/sites/default/files/2020-
05/China%27s%20cosmological%20communism.pdf
Teixeira e Silva, Roberval & Maria Célia Lima-Fernandes. (2014). Políticas linguísticas e
língua portuguesa em Macau, China: à guisa de introdução. Signótica, 26, 61-76.
DOI:10.5216/sig.v26iesp..31400
The Macao News (2024). National education topics will be introduced from the next school
year. The Macao News. Retrieved from
https://macaonews.org/news/community/macau-national-patriotic-education-schools-
macao/
JANUS.NET, e-journal of International Relations
e-ISSN: 1647-7251
VOL. 16, Nº. 2, TD2
Thematic Dossier - Portugal and China in International Relations: Historical Legacies
and Contemporary Dynamics
February 2026, pp. 55-79
Ideology and Education in China: Portuguese Language Policy at the Intersection
of Statecraft and Strategy
Luís Filipe Pestana, Luís Pires
79
Touchard, Jean (1961). Historia de las Ideas Politicas. Madrid: Editorial Tecnos S.A.
Wang, Robert S. (1975). Educational Reforms and the Cultural Revolution: The Chinese
Evaluation Process. Asian Survey, 15(9), 758774. https://doi.org/10.2307/2643172
Wang, Zheng (2008). National Humiliation, History Education, and the Politics of
Historical Memory: Patriotic Education Campaign in China”. International Studies
Quarterly, 52: 783-806
Xi, Jinping (2014). The Chinese Dream of the Great Rejuvenation of the Chinese Nation.
Beijing: Foreign Languages Press.
Xinhua (2019). China’s rural population percentage cut 50% over 70 years. The State
Council The People’s Republic of China. Retrieved from
https://english.www.gov.cn/archive/statistics/201909/03/content_WS5d6e6561c6d0c6
695ff7fbab.html
Xinhua (2024). Xi stresses breaking new ground in ideological, political education. China
Daily. Retrieved from
https://www.chinadaily.com.cn/a/202405/11/WS663f2592a31082fc043c698d.html
Xinhua (2025). China unveils blueprint for building strong education system by 2035.
Xinhua. Retrieved from
https://english.news.cn/20250120/2d2dbb6c5a6c490babc6bdf361d95775/c.html
Yan, Yuxuan, Li Yanze & Fu, Xiaonan (2021). Exploration and research of harmony
thought in ideological and political education practice in colleges and universities.
Frontiers in Educational Research. 4 (15): 57-61. DOI: 10.25236/FER.2021.041512
Yang, Xiong (2021). “The Roots of and Solution to ‘Education Involution’ in the Age of
Artificial Intelligence”. Reading the China Dream. Retrieved from
https://www.readingthechinadream.com/yang-xiong-on-educational-involution.html
Ye, Z. (2014). Algumas Considerações sobre a Expansão do Ensino da ngua Portuguesa
na China. In M. J. Grosso & A. P. C. Godinho (Eds.), O Português na China: Ensino e
Investigação. LIDEL.
Zeng, J. (2016). Ideological and Political Education in China. In: The Chinese Communist
Party’s Capacity to Rule. Critical Studies of the Asia-Pacific. Palgrave Macmillan, London.
https://doi.org/10.1007/978-1-137-53368-5_5
Zhao, Nan, Shi, Chunyan & Wang, Chenyang (2024). “Effects of the “double reduction”
policy on the commercial tutoring sector in China”. International Journal of Educational
Development. 105: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ijedudev.2024.102989
Zhao, S. (1998). A State-Led Nationalism: The Patriotic Education Campaign in Post-
Tiananmen China. Communist and Post-Communist Studies, 31: 287-302.
https://doi.org/10.1016/S0967-067X(98)00009-9
Zhao, Tingyang (2019). Redefining a Philosophy for World Governance. Singapore:
Palgrave Macmillan.