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yutaan · 1 year
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The first of two illustrations I did for the MDZS WIP Big Bang! I’m paired with the upcoming fic "If I Should Fall Behind" written by theladyscribe, in which Lan Wangji and Wen Qing enter an arranged marriage! 
“The wedding was not what he had imagined, on those rare occasions Lan Wangji thought of his marriage. Wen Qing stood at the top of the steps, red veil dancing lightly in the wind. Red and gold suited her: a crimson gash on the white marble. Her stance was rigid, as if she, too, would rather be anywhere other than here, fulfilling the wedding contract made between their clans some ten years ago. A small comfort that perhaps he was not alone in this. * A wedding, a war, a friendship, a home.”
The fic will be posted later this month! :D Please keep an eye out, lovelies!
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kaori-kai · 4 years
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honestly i’m so happy I found your blog and get to support it. your gifs are so cute and I just adored it so much 🥺🤲🏼 I appreciate your hard work and thank you for your wonderful masterpiece 😚💓
hi! this is such a lovely message!! thank you so much 😭🥺 this made me squeal ajbdjssbns this really means a lot to me. I appreciate you!and I’ll continue to work harddd 🥰
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surprisings-remade · 5 years
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OH MY GOD I WISH I CAN BE FRIENDS WITH YOU I JUST NOTICE YOU LIKE HAIKYUU PLUS I GOT A 6/10 IM IWISHSBSN (sorry i got...excited....)
HSDJKFHDF if u wanna be my friend then message me man 😌✊
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tittiez · 4 years
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I was tagged by @babyouare for my 2019 selfies 😚
I tag @fingerstoe @horizonnmp3 @jaeminsoftgf @kunyanq @lovflushed @zhanqs @xuxisbimbo @weishenv if ur comfortable!
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jaguarmen99 · 4 years
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だが、中国当局に隠れて遺族らに助言を行っている弁護士20数人の調整役を担う米国在住の中国人活動家、楊占清(Yang Zhanqing)氏によると、裁判所は手続き上の理由とだけ言って、詳しい説明なくこれらの訴訟を却下しているという。しかも文書記録を残したくないという意図なのか、法律上必要とされている書面もなく、電話一本での通告だという。AFPの取材に対し、武漢の裁判所関係者はコメントを拒否した。(c)AFP/Dan Martin
武漢市、コロナ患者遺族の訴訟を門前払い 写真9枚 国際ニュース:AFPBB News
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brajeshupadhyay · 4 years
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Wuhan: At least five lawsuits have been filed with the Wuhan Intermediate Court, said Zhang Hai, whose elderly father died of the virus and who has emerged as a vocal advocate and spokesman for families of virus victims. Plaintiffs are each seeking around two million yuan ($295,000) in damages and a public apology. But the court has rejected suits on unspecified procedural grounds, said Yang Zhanqing, a veteran Chinese activist now in the US. Yang, who is coordinating two dozen lawyers in China who are secretly advising families, said the rejections have come via curt phone calls – not through official written explanations, as legally required – apparently to avoid a paper trail. Staff at the Wuhan court refused AFP requests for comment. Stonewalling The virus emerged in Wuhan last December but city authorities initially dragged their feet, pressuring whistle-blowing doctors to keep quiet. The Communist Party continues to downplay responsibility, even questioning whether the pathogen originated in China while trumpeting its later success in suppressing domestic infections. It held a grand ceremony in Beijing last week, where President Xi Jinping declared the nation had passed an "extraordinary and historic test" through a swift and transparent response. But Zhong tells a different story. By late January, the contagion was spreading rapidly in Wuhan, but officials had still issued no citywide alarm. With the extended Lunar New Year festival approaching, Zhong and her son Peng Yi -- a 39-year-old primary schoolteacher -- happily shopped at jam-packed stores. Millions of others left Wuhan for the holiday, taking the infection globally. "We had no idea the buses were full of the virus... So we went out every day. We didn't even know about masks," Zhong told AFP. On 24 January, as Wuhan finally began locking down, she and Peng fell ill. She soon recovered, but he worsened. Fear gripped their household, which included Zhong's husband, Peng's wife, and his seven-year-old daughter. For the next two agonising weeks, they spent long hours in overwhelmed hospitals begging to get him admitted, but without a positive result – and with testing kits scarce – he has repeatedly turned away. Peng was finally hospitalised on 6 February. His family never saw him alive again. He died on a respirator two weeks later. "He must have been so scared, so unhappy, with no family around. I can't imagine how sad he was," said Zhong, breaking down repeatedly. "Did he call out 'Mother'? 'Father'? I don't know." 'Never give up' Zhang Hai believes his father was infected at a Wuhan hospital during treatment for an unrelated ailment. He says authorities are waging a campaign to discredit him, suspending his social media accounts and circulating disinformation that the legal efforts are a scam to bilk families. Others also have reported official intimidation, and next-of-kin chat groups have been infiltrated by police, Zhang alleged, blaming Wuhan's government. "They know if I succeed in filing a case, many other families will sue, too," he said. Wuhan's government did not respond to AFP's requests for comment. Zhang said dozens of bereaved relatives have coalesced in chat groups, but most are fearful of taking action. With his initial suit in Wuhan rejected, Zhang filed recently with a higher, provincial-level court. Zhong, the elderly pensioner, plans the same. Yang, the US-based activist, believes it "very likely" the government will quietly meet some families' demands eventually, though a public apology is inconceivable. Until then, Zhang intends to appeal all the way to China's highest court in Beijing, regardless of the personal risks. "My father is my motivation," he said.  
http://sansaartimes.blogspot.com/2020/09/china-blocking-lawsuits-against-wuhan.html
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yaoiplug · 4 years
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tagged by @byalive and @byunhyun to share my homescreen, lockscreen, last song i listened to, and last photo i saved 😳
im gonna tag @yixing-zhang @cottonmyeons @taeyongsgf @dilfsuho @zhanqs @byunsole @x-byun only if ud like to do this <3
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frenchkisst · 4 years
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First Covid-19 lawsuit filed against Chinese government in latest sign of bubbling unrest
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When Zhang Hai checked his father into a hospital in Wuhan mid-January, he had no idea a novel coronavirus was sweeping through the city. 
Chinese authorities had yet to sound the alarm, despite mounting evidence the virus was fatal and transmitting quickly – at least two were dead, and infections had spread abroad. But police pressured doctors to stay silent, and hospitals wouldn’t allow extra protective gear, even as medical staff fell ill.
So Mr Zhang never imagined his father, a 76-year-old veteran, would be infected with Covid-19 at the hospital while having a thigh fracture repaired, and die within a week.
“If the government didn’t cover up the disease in the early stages, my father wouldn’t have died,” Mr Zhang, 50, told the Telegraph. “I am furious… so many people lost their lives during this pandemic. What they did amounts to murder.”
On Wednesday, Mr Zhang filed the first lawsuit in China against the government that seeks restitution for its cover-up of the pandemic, according to lawyers and documents reviewed by the Telegraph.
He’s demanding nearly 2 million yuan (£215,000) from the authorities and the hospital to cover his late father’s government pension had he survived, the psychological toll on the family and funeral expenses, as well as an official apology. 
The unprecedented lawsuit poses immense risk for Mr Zhang as it challenges the ruling Communist Party’s official narrative, which denies a cover-up, glosses over missteps, and instead focuses on containment success.
China has used a selective timeline to defend against growing criticism over its lack of transparency in the pandemic, even as lawsuits seeking punitive damages from Beijing pile up across the globe, including in the US, India and Nigeria.
“The case is very sensitive, so the court will probably give us a cold shoulder,” said Yang Zhanqing, Mr Zhang’s lawyer. “At the same time, the court will notify the local government, and the authorities will coerce him to withdraw the lawsuit.”
Story continues
Chinese authorities are working overtime to snuff out anger over its mishandling of the outbreak. 
In Wuhan, ground zero of the pandemic, police have threatened to arrest people organising to file complaints if they meet in groups of five or more, said Chen Jiangang, a lawyer trying to negotiate settlements for families of those who died. 
“The pressure comes from everywhere – not only from the police, but also the Communist Party neighbourhood committees, in the workplace, even relatives at home,” he said.
One state-owned company employee was pressured by her manager to stop complaining to journalists that a hospital refused to issue a coronavirus diagnosis, even though she tested positive and needed a positive diagnosis to file an insurance claim. Her boss warned doing so was a “political mistake,” her lawyer told the Telegraph. 
Others have been compelled by police and local party officials to abandon their pursuits for reparations. Lawyers in China have also been told to cease providing assistance.
“If you show you are indignant or critical, they can immediately locate you and get information about your family and movements, including who you talked to and where you have been,” said Mr Chen. “There’s 24-hour monitoring.” 
Most people acquiesced out of fear, but Mr Zhang continues to defy threats. His social media posts have been censored and police have made clear they’re watching him. 
Police waved a printout of his comments in a group chat – since shut down by the authorities – with more than a hundred people hoping to seek reparations for relatives’ deaths, chiding him for “meddling with ‘anti-China’ forces,” he said. 
The Chinese government frequently blame dissidents for unpatriotic behaviour by siding with “foreign” forces, an argument that has gotten louder as countries call for an independent inquiry into coronavirus origins.
“If we say anything, they accuse us of handing a knife to ‘anti-China’ agents,” said Mr Zhang. But “they’re the ones wielding the knife, hurting me, so why am I not allowed to speak up?”
His lawyer was so concerned for his safety that he immediately feared police had detained Mr Zhang after he stopped replying to messages for two hours the day after filing the lawsuit.
For now, a draconian mix of surveillance and the threat of consequences has kept social unrest at bay. Authorities have managed to rein in public anger that hit a peak when whistleblower doctor Li Wenliang died in February and government censors struggled to delete the surge of critical comments online. 
Chinese soldiers wearing face masks in Beijing — ROMAN PILIPEY/EPA-EFE/Shutterstock
But in Wuhan, discontent continues to brew. Families remain angry with hospitals and quarantine facilities for not accepting patients and negligence, while others are upset at companies for mandating work and offering inadequate protective supplies.
A woman whose father-in-law died is quarrelling with quarantine facility staff for refusing to deliver medicine to him and failing to provide a health certificate that would allow the family to apply for reparations.
Protests have also sprung up. As quarantines lifted in April, dozens of shopkeepers at a mall demanded lower rents after being forced to shutter all year. Other residents were outraged at property management for high prices for groceries and home essentials during the lockdown. Last month, outrage flared after another doctor died from the coronavirus. 
The pressure campaign could last decades – even now, Chinese authorities will detain people who lost relatives in the 1989 Tiananmen Square massacre when the military gunned down peaceful pro-democracy protesters, an event the government still won’t acknowledge.
Despite the risks, Mr Zhang refuses to give up. 
“Many families have fallen silent under pressure, which I understand,” he said. “But I won’t be gagged. If I am, my father will have died in vain, and that wouldn’t do him justice.”
Additional reporting by Lya Cai
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yutaan · 1 year
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The second of two illustrations I did for the MDZS WIP Big Bang! I’m paired with the upcoming fic “If I Should Fall Behind” written by theladyscribe, in which Lan Wangji and Wen Qing enter an arranged marriage!
“The wedding was not what he had imagined, on those rare occasions Lan Wangji thought of his marriage. Wen Qing stood at the top of the steps, red veil dancing lightly in the wind. Red and gold suited her: a crimson gash on the white marble. Her stance was rigid, as if she, too, would rather be anywhere other than here, fulfilling the wedding contract made between their clans some ten years ago. A small comfort that perhaps he was not alone in this. * A wedding, a war, a friendship, a home.”
The fic will be posted later this month! :D Please keep an eye out, lovelies!
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dodonglonghieu · 4 years
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'Lửa giận' vẫn âm ỉ tại Vũ Hán
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Nhiều người Vũ Hán từng nhắn tin cho Yang Zhanqing nhờ anh kiện chính phủ Trung Quốc, nhưng sau vài tuần, họ đột nhiên đổi ý hoặc ngừng liên lạc. from Tin mới nhất - VnExpress RSS https://ift.tt/2WrEBD8 via IFTTT
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humanrightsupdates · 7 years
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China: Poet detained after commemorating Liu Xiaobo
Poet Wu Mingliang, better known as “Langzi” (literally “Wanderer”), has been criminally detained on suspicion of “illegal business operations”. Previously held for questioning after co-signing a letter in support of Liu Xiaobo, Amnesty International believes he is being targeted for helping publish an anthology of poems commemorating the late Nobel Peace Prize Laureate. Authorities have 37 days to decide whether to lay formal charges.
Wu Mingliang, a well-known poet in Guangzhou and member of Independent Chinese PEN Centre, was taken away by police officers from his home and criminally detained on 18 August 2017 on suspicion of “illegal business operations”. His home was also raided and the police took away his computers and other personal belongings. Wu Mingliang is currently detained in Haizhu District Detention Centre in Guangzhou, Guangdong province.
Wu Mingling’s lawyer and friends believe that he is currently being detained due to his involvement in producing an anthology of poems in memory of Liu Xiaobo, who had passed away on 13 July 2017. Wu Mingling was administratively detained for 10 days on 1 July 2017 after co-signing a letter of support of the detained Liu Xiaobo. During that time he was repeatedly asked by the police about an anthology of poems he took part in writing, editing and compiling to commemorate Liu Xiaobo, the late Nobel Peace Prize laureate.
During a visit to the detention centre by his lawyer on 23 August 2017, Wu Mingliang said that the police officers in the detention centre repeatedly questioned him about an exhibition catalogue of his work that he published without receiving the explicit permission from the authorities. According to Wu Mingliang’s friends, Peng Heping, who printed Wu Mingliang’s exhibition catalogue, was also criminally detained on suspicion of “illegal business operations” on 29 August at the same detention centre. There are no further details about his detention.
As the men are being criminally detained, the Public Security Bureau will need to decide within 37 days whether they will formally arrest Wu Mingliang and Peng Heping. Chinese authorities have often detained activists and civil society actors using charges of economic crimes.
Please write immediately in English, Chinese or your own language urging the authorities to:
Release Wu Mingliang and Peng Heping unconditionally and immediately unless there is sufficient credible and admissible evidence that they have committed an internationally recognized offence and are granted a fair trial in line with international standards;
Ensure that they are protected from torture and other ill-treatment, and that they are allowed prompt and regular access to their family, a lawyer of their choice and adequate medical care;
End the use of politically motivated criminal charges against writers, journalists and human rights, trade union and other civil society activists, in an attempt to harass, intimidate and punish them.
PLEASE SEND APPEALS BEFORE 17 OCTOBER 2017 TO: Director Haizhu District Detention Centre No. 655 Nanzhoulu Haizhuqu, Guangzhou Shi Guangdong Sheng, People’s Republic of China Tel: +86 20 8417 6963 (Chinese only) Salutation: Dear Director
Director Li Chunsheng Guangdong Provincial Public Security Department No. 97 Huanghualu, Guangzhou Shi Guangdong Sheng 510050 People’s Republic of China Tel: +86 20 8383 2980 Email: [email protected] Salutation: Dear Director
And copies to: Minister of Public Security Guo Shengkun 14 Dong Chang’an Jie Dongcheng Qu Beijing Shi 100741 People’s Republic of China Tel: +86 10 6626 2114 (Chinese only) Email: [email protected]
Also send copies to diplomatic representatives accredited to your country. HIS EXCELLENCY MR LIU XIAOMING, Embassy of the People's Republic of China, 49-51 Portland Place W1B 1JL, 020 7299 4049, [email protected]
Please check with your section office if sending appeals after the above date. ADDITIONAL INFORMATION Wu Mingliang, 48, is a well-known poet in China and a member of the Independent Chinese PEN Centre, an affiliate of PEN International, an international writers’ organization. The late Nobel Peace laureate Liu Xiaobo was a former president of the Independent Chinese PEN Centre. Wu Mingliang previously worked in newspapers and magazines in Guangdong. He started writing in 1985 and has authored and edited a number of poetry anthologies.
Wu Mingliang was detained for two weeks after taking part in the Chinese “Jasmine Revolution” in China, a series of pro-democracy protests in 2011. After 17 February 2011 when an anonymous call for a ‘Jasmine Revolution’ was posted online, more than a hundred activists were detained, put under surveillance or illegal house arrest, or simply went missing. In addition, at least a dozen lawyers were briefly detained and pressured by the authorities not to take up cases defending the activists, and even told by police to stop tweeting about those detained.
In June 2017, Wu Mingliang co-signed a statement to support Liu Xiaobo, who was then critically ill in detention, and gave interviews to the Hong Kong Cable TV. Likely as a result, on 1 July 2017, he was administratively detained for 10 days.
China has frequently detained human rights defenders and dissidents on charges that are economic in nature, as a means to avoid criticism that would otherwise arise with charges more commonly used in cases the government considers “sensitive”. Human rights campaigner Guo Feixiong was detained in February 2006 and sentenced to five years in prison in November 2007 after being convicted of the crime of “illegal business activity”, after he published a book entitled Shenyang Political Earthquake. Artist Ai Weiwei was detained in April 2011 and held without charges in arbitrary detention for 81 days, until he was eventually charged with tax evasion. Two activists associated with prominent anti-discrimination NGO Yirenping, Guo Bin and Yang Zhanqing, as well as Guo Yushan and He Zhengjun of the non-profit think tank Transition Institute were detained in 2015 on suspicion of “illegal business operations”, as part of a wider crackdown on civil society groups in China.
At least nine activists were detained in late July after they participated in seaside memorials for Liu Xiaobo in Jiangmen, Guangdong, to mark the seventh day after the Nobel laureate’s death. Wei Xiaobing, He Lin, Liu Guangxiao, Li Shujia, Wang Meiju and Qin Mingxin were released about a month later (see https://www.amnesty.org/en/documents/asa17/7001/2017/en/ for more information). Another activist Ma Qiang was first detained in Sichuan when he was travelling in a Tibetan area there and was later transferred to the detention centre in Jiangmen. In addition, Jiang Jianjun and Wang Chenggang, who went to Laohutan (Tiger Beach) in Dalian (very close to where Liu Xiaobo’s ashes were scattered) on 17 July 2017 to pay tribute to Liu Xiaobo, were administratively detained for 10 days before being released on 29 July and 30 July respectively.
Liu Xiaobo was sentenced to 11 years imprisonment in 2009 for “inciting subversion of state power” for co-drafting “Charter 08” – a manifesto asking the Chinese government to respect universal human rights values and democratic development – and writing other articles criticizing the Chinese government.
UA: 201/17 Index: ASA 17/7027/2017 Issue Date: 5 September 2017
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You can view all UAs on our website here. To download your copy of the Urgent Action Participation Guide that will tell you everything you need to know about the Network click here. To see latest updates, blogs and our quarterly news round up on Urgent Actions please visit our Urgent Action blog here.
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tittiez · 4 years
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hi I was tagged by @zhanqs for the lockscreen + homescreen + last song I listened to + last photo I saved tag!
I’m tagging (if you want to ofc!) @deobibf @supermjopping @1ove1ies @ba5e @vogueksoo and @zit 💖
#dl
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zuryatkibleree · 4 years
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Shanghai global financial center project in progress
1 Gaoyun; Shanghai global financial center project in progress (4) [J]; construction mechanization; 2006 issue 04 2 Hu song, Liu Qiang, Liu Ying; design and installation of temporary steel platform of a building [J]; steel structure; 2004-06 3 Hou Lilin;; construction and use of fabricated unloading steel platform [J]; urban construction in Guangxi; 2008 12 issues 4 Ren Haibo; Niu Dali; LV Lixia;; application of integral steel platform automatic climbing technology in Hebei Kaiyuan global center [J]; construction technology; 2010 06 issues 5 yuan Weikun;; construction technology of high-altitude and long-span steel platform support system [J]; construction technology; issue 13, 2011 6 Xue Yongshen; Feng Jun;; Key technology of design and use of alternate support steel structure hangar type integral steel platform based on construction management [J]; construction; 2014-01 7 Bi Juncheng; Shanghai Wandu center overall lifting steel platform [J]; construction technology; 2000-03       8 Zeng Zhihong, Xue Yongshen, Chen Guocheng, sun LINRONG, Fu Xinli, Xu Jun; Shanghai Shimao International Plaza core tube self elevating steel platform construction system [J]; construction; 2005, 08 9 PENG Guoyun; Liu Xianling; Ma Yuxiang; unloading steel platform design scheme [J]; Fujian architecture; 2008, 06 10 Liu Lihang; Lou Xiangwei; design and construction of steel platform for super large span formwork [J]; construction; 2013 12 phase < 1 Zhang Huaifu;; Application of steel platform inverted construction technology in the construction of 210m chimney of tianalkali self provided power plant [a]; proceedings of the fourth national steel structure engineering technology exchange conference [C]; 2012 2 Wei Hongxian; Zhou Zhanqing;; design of steel platform of clean workshop [a]; Academic Library of civil architecture (Volume 13) [C]; 2010 3 Xian Xueying; discussion on the design of cantilevered components [a]; selected papers for the 55th anniversary of Tianjin municipal (highway) Engineering Research Institute (1950-2005) Volume I [C]; 2005 4 Zhu Yu; key construction technology of cantilever structure of Hamburg case Hall of Shanghai World Expo [a]; 2012 meeting and new technology experience exchange meeting of construction mechanization branch of China construction society and China Construction Machinery Industry Association [C]; 2012 5 Huang Xinliang; Chen bravely; Yi Jianwen; analysis of cantilever structure construction condition of Chongqing Grand Theatre [a];'2012 China Steel Structure Industry ConferencePaper collection [C]; 2012 6 he Hai; Wang Haishan;; Large Span Cantilever Construction and installation technology of truss [a]; new construction technology and application of large complex steel structure [C]; 2012 7 Huang Yihui;; structural design of long-span cantilever frame [a]; proceedings of the Sixth National Academic Conference on Structural Engineering (Volume I) [C]; 1997 8 Zhou Hong; Gong Jian; Li Qing;; Super high altitude transfer construction technology of formwork scaffold system of core tube steel platform of Shanghai global financial center [a]; discussion on the 17th construction technology exchange meeting of six provinces and one city in East ChinaCollected works [C]; 2008 9 Wang Hui; Dingsen;; construction of high-altitude large cantilever structure [a]; collected papers of 2011 academic annual meeting of Jilin civil engineering and Architecture Society [C]; 2011 10 Bao Lianjin; Li Ye; Wang Jian; Tong Jun; research on a long-span cantilevered building structure scheme [a]; building structure (2009 supplement) - Proceedings of the second national architectural structure technology exchange conference [C]; 2009 1 Chen Li; code for fabrication and installation of cantilevered steel platform [n]; China Architecture daily; 2011       2 Hu Biwei; quality problem analysis and treatment method of masonry cantilevered structure [n]; Ili daily (Han); 2006 3 reporter of Guangdong Construction News Han Qingwen, correspondent Liu Wei; the great devil's Square will "dance" [n]; Guangdong Construction News; 2014 1 Yu Xiancai; Application Research of formwork supporting steel platform in the construction of high-rise multi-layer concrete corridor [D]; Southeast University; 2015 2 Du Wen; structural analysis and construction technology research of large temporary steel platform [D]; Chongqing University; 2016 3 Ruan Yuting; research on construction technology of steel platform formwork system in super high rise buildings [D]; South China University of technology; 2011 4 Lin Shouzhong; Development and research of new type load-bearing members of outrigger in construction [D]; Xi'an University of architecture and technology; 2015 5 Wang Jun; construction and artistic presentation of contemporary architectural cantilevered space [D]; Nanchang University; 2015 < 6 Wang Hailong; Construction control of prestressed large cantilevered steel truss structure of the same steel type [D]; Yanshan University; 2016 7 Yao Tong; seismic performance analysis of steel frame large cantilevered structure [D]; Hefei University of technology; 2016 8 Zhang Ning; research and design of large-span cantilevered structure of Zunyi planning exhibition hall [D]; Guizhou University; 2016 9 Pan Rui; dynamic elastoplastic analysis and research of large cantilevered complex statue structure [D]; Southeast University; 2016 10 Liuwei; Hengqin Poly Plaza large cantilever structure construction simulation analysis [D]; Guangzhou University; 2016
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