Oct. 25, 1945 Retrocesion Day ? [ PRO ]

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Hartzell
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Oct. 25, 1945 Retrocesion Day ? [ PRO ]

#1 Post by Hartzell »

. . . . on Oct. 25, 1945, sovereignty over Taiwan was returned by a defeated Japan to the Republic of China as specified in the Allies' Cairo Declaration of 1943.



Letter to the Editor
New York Times
Taiwan Sets Example Of Freedom for China
Published: April 19, 1995
Yun-feng PAI, Director, Information Division Taipei Economic & Cultural Office New York, N.Y.

http://www.nytimes.com/1995/04/19/opini ... 25495.html
(accessed June 12, 2015)

Hartzell
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Re: Oct. 25, 1945 Retrocesion Day ? [ PRO ]

#2 Post by Hartzell »

March 18, 2000


Chronology of Taiwan-China Relations Since 1945


By AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE

1945: Japan is defeated in World War II and the Republic of China (ROC) takes possesion of Taiwan, which has been under Japanese colonial rule for 50 years, in a move agreed by the Allied Powers in their 1943 Cairo Conference.

http://partners.nytimes.com/library/wor ... hrono.html

Hartzell
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Re: Oct. 25, 1945 Retrocesion Day ? [ PRO ]

#3 Post by Hartzell »

See https://goo.gl/2p5mhC

( Mentioned in June 5 email to Brian )

China and the Taiwan Issue Impending War At Taiwan Strait, author: Gabe T. Wang, copyright 2006 by University Press of America, Inc,, Lanham, Maryland 20707, webpage https://goo.gl/2p5mhC (accessed June 5, 2015)


( Conceivably, there might be more information in such a ft/so entry, for example maybe this information in this book was quoted in another online article. In such a case, I could also list out that full information. Or maybe this information was quoted in another book I found in the library or something. I could give the full details.)

Hartzell
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Re: Oct. 25, 1945 Retrocesion Day ? [ PRO ]

#4 Post by Hartzell »

"Taiwan's Referenda, Constitutional Reform and the Question of Taiwan's International Status", by Jacques deLisle, Feb. 2004, Foreign Policy Research Institute, Philadelphia, Penn.
http://www.fpri.org/articles/2004/02/ta ... nal-status (accessed June 7, 2014)

Jacques deLisle is Director of FPRI's Asia Program and the Stephen A. Cozen Professor of Law, Professor of Political Science, Director of the Center for East Asian Studies and Deputy Directory of the Center for the Study of Contemporary China at the University of Pennsylvania, specializing in Chinese politics and legal reform, U.S-China relations, cross-strait relations, and China's engagement with the international legal order.

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