The whole world is celebrating the Chinese New Year. The U.K. has rolled out their celebration agenda across the country from London to Manchester. There will be lion dance parades, stage performances, lantern festivals, carnivals, limited edition of food on offer, and many more.
Adidas Celebrates the Year of Rooster with New Sneakers Launch
Carriageworks presenting Chinese New Year Night Market – 28th January, 2017
2017 Chinese New Year 101
Following on the heels of the widely-celebrated Christmas and calendar New Year, the next major celebration in Australia is Chinese New Year. This year it will fall on 28th January. To welcome the Chinese New Year, Cultural Perspectives have prepared some facts that you might not know about the 2017 Chinese New Year
Chinese Taste for Tasmanian Wine Grows
Made in China Label No Longer Means Cheap
The latest observation is that the Chinese consumers are not satisfied with big brands any more – represented by the rising middle class with more disposable money than ever, the Chinese consumers have developed a taste for originality, sophistication, quality and style. New generation of the Chinese designers are gripping this opportunity. Made in China is no longer a cheap label.
Important Paper on the Experiences of Women International Students
Celebrating Chinese Culture and Innovation in Arts
Pathways 2 University “Not all educational pathways are equal”
Australian Tourism to Benefit from China’s Cheap Airfares Deals?
China’s flood of cheap international airfares with better route coverage and more direct connection will surely benefit the international tourism, even though posing pressure to global carriers, particularly Qantas, when the Australian government announced on 4th December an agreement with China to remove all capacity restrictions between the two nations.