"not many works carry the potential of injecting fresh perspectives into the polarized understandings of development in Tibet as either domination/subjugation or liberation/progress. Adrian Zenz offers this potential in his book (...). With a focus on the ever-sensitive subject of education, the book strikes a nuanced balance between the agency–structure dualism of Han Chinese dominance versus Tibetan-led initiatives that subvert or counter this dominance. In particular, it offers a rare insight into the dynamics of minority education that will unsettle the dominant view that Tibetan-medium education has been eroded since the “golden years” of Tibetanization in the 1980s.(...) Overall, the value of his work is immense for our understanding of contemporary Tibet, minority nationality policy in China, and the anthropology of education more generally." - Andrew M. Fischer, in: The China Quarterly, 219 (2014)"Adrian Zenz’s 'Tibetanness’ under Threat? is one of the most informative publications concerning the current politics of Tibetan education and ethnic identity in the People’s Republic of China. (...) Based on his long-standing fieldwork, Zenz argues against the existing dualism of the ‘oppressed Tibetans’ and the ‘assimilatory state’ as a commonly accepted scholarly perspective. His study of Tibetan identity, or ‘Tibetanness’ in his own coinage, goes beyond the conventional understanding of ethnicity based on natural factors such as language, culture and ancestrally defined homeland.(...) This book is an integral part of modern/contemporary Tibetan studies situated in the multi-dimensional context of China’s modernization, politics of ethnic identity, and globalization.(...) Zenz has done a marvellous job capturing the dynamics of divergent intra-Tibetan debates and external forces of change ensuing from China’s modernization and economic globalization." - Dan Smyer Yü, Center for Trans-Himalayan Studies, Yunnan Minzu University, China, in: China Information, 29/1 (2015)