Human Rights and
International Democratic Solidarity
SPANISH
ABOUT CADAL
ABOUT CADAL
Who we are
>Board
>Staff
>RESEARCHERS AND ADVISORS
>ANALYSTS
What we do
International Internships
Volunteering
Funding
Agreements and Alliances
Annual Reports
Donate
You also can be a part of it!
+ Information
PROJECTS
EVENTS
PUBLICATIONS
PUBLICATIONS
All
+ Information
Articles
+ Information
Research Reports
+ Information
Books
+ Information
Donate
You also can be a part of it!
+ Information
All
Articles
Research Reports
Books
PRESS
STATEMENTS
TV
NEWSLETTER
DONATE
MEMBERS
Español
Dorothea Krueger
Projects Assistant
Dorothea Krueger holds a Bachelor of Arts in International Cultural and Business Studies from the University of Passau (Germany), a Licentiate degree in Intercultural Economic Management from the Universidad del Salvador (Argentina) and a Master of Arts in International Relations and Diplomacy from Trier University (Germany). In 2020, she joined CADAL as an international intern and then continued collaborating as volunteer Student Research Assistant. Since 2024 she is Project Assistant at CADAL.
Dorothea Krueger's publications
Articles
|
Artículos
|
Diálogo Latino Cubano
|
Informes
|
Research Reports
See Dorothea Krueger's publications in collaboration with other authors
24-08-2020 | Research Reports
China: A hard-line autocracy that loses credibility at an international level
The country report of China in the Bertelsmann Transformation Index (BTI) 2020 shows little change for the continent-sized Asian country since the last report of 2018. Structural challenges continued to intensify and the CCP’s single-party leadership does not consider democratic transformation as an objective to be pursued. On the contrary, the administration of President Xi Jinping continued to oppress opponents and dissidents while intensifying ideological indoctrination and surveillance. The deprivation of civil liberties, the concentration of power and the lack of political participation are the main reasons for classifying China in the BTI as a hard-line autocracy. At the same time, the BTI warns that China is becoming increasingly isolated from the world’s liberal democracies and loses their confidence. Human rights violations in so-called “re-education camps”, where it is estimated that more than one million Uyghurs are held, caused widespread criticism among Western democracies and lead to even more concern over China’s candidacy for the UN Human Rights Council elections in October this year.
[1]