In 2005, Wang Gongquan became a research in Gongmeng (Open Constitution Initiative). In 2008, Wang initiated the "Equal Rights for Education" campaign, whose goal is to abolish the
hukou constraint in
gaokao (college admission exam) for students in migrant families. After several years' hard work, Ministry of Education revised the policy in August 2012 under the public pressure, subsequently, all cities and provinces except Beijing and Shanghai removed or promised to remove the constraint. In 2009, Wang sponsored the magazine "Civil Society Review". This magazine was revoked by the authority. In June 2010, Wang and
Xu Zhiyong,
Teng Biao, Li Xiongbing, Li Fangping,
Xu Youyu and Zhang Shihe (Laohumiao), initiated the "Citizens' Pledge", calling for the awakening and improvement of Chinese citizens' civil rights awareness. This event is usually regarded as the start of the New Citizens' Movement (even though it was prior to the coinage of the term). In 2011, Wang spent a year as a visiting scholar at Columbia University, conducting research on civil society and democratic transition. On 11 September 2012, all of Wang's microblog accounts in China were deleted. He had 1.56 million followers at Sina Weibo at time of closing. On 16 July 2013, Xu Zhiyong was detained for allegedly "disturbing order in public space". Wang Gongquan,
Mao Yushi,
Xiaoshu, He Sanwei and Yang Zili issued an open letter calling for the release of Dr Xu and other arrested citizens. More than 3000 people have signed the petition. On 13 September 2013, Beijing police searched Wang Gongquan's Beijing residence and detained him in the evening.
Liu Suli,
Guo Yushan, and Xiaoshu issued a statement calling for the release of Wang; nearly 1000 people signed the statement in four days. Wang was formally arrested on 20 October 2013. ==Other==