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Sherry Rosen

Bio: Sherry Rosen is an academic researcher. The author has an hindex of 1, co-authored 1 publications receiving 54 citations.

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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is concluded that providing social investments in education in early life and economic security and medical insurance in later life for both the childless and parents are crucial for improving individual psychological well-being and life satisfaction for the elderly.
Abstract: This paper examines the effects of childlessness on the well-being of persons aged 65 and above in China. It is based on an application of ordered-logit regression in the analysis of the data from the 2002 wave of the Chinese Longitudinal Healthy Longevity Survey (CLHLS) conducted in 22 provinces of China (N = 13,447). It compares parents with the childless elderly, focusing on three dimensions of psychological well-being, namely feelings of anxiety, loneliness, and uselessness, and on life satisfaction. The findings include the following. First, with control of social demographic variables of age, gender and education, childlessness is significantly associated with life satisfaction, feeling of anxiety and loneliness, but not feeling of uselessness. The childless elderly are less satisfied with their lives and feel more anxious and lonely than do parents, but they do not necessarily feel significantly more useless. Second, when controlled with social-demographic variables and additional socioeconomic variables of residence, living arrangement, availability of pension and medical services, childlessness is no longer significantly related to anxiety and loneliness, and it is related at only a marginally-significant level to life satisfaction. Third, individual education, place of residence, living arrangements, economic security and access to medical services are consistently related to life satisfaction and psychological well-being among the elderly. We conclude that providing social investments in education in early life and economic security and medical insurance in later life for both the childless and parents are crucial for improving individual psychological well-being and life satisfaction for the elderly.

113 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The authors explored major current debates on ideology, teleology, epistemology and technology within the social work profession in the West and their implications for social work development in China, and found that Chinese social work scholars have adopted the century-old conceptual formulation of "Chinese corpus, western application" to balance the need for western knowledge and the need to intellectual autonomy.
Abstract: Indigenization is a key issue in the development of professional social work in China. Chinese social work scholars have adopted the century-old conceptual formulation of ‘Chinese corpus, western application’ to balance the need for western knowledge and the need for intellectual autonomy. This article explores major current debates on ideology, teleology, epistemology and technology within the social work profession in the West and their implications for social work development in China.

80 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors survey and compare the contours and achievements of China's pension system in light of its imminent collapse and the reassessment of development priorities associated with privatization, market transition and fiscal crisis since the late 1970s.

74 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This study examined the relationship between parenting stress and social support in a random sample of 100 mothers with children at a school for children with learning disabilities and a control group of 75 mothers with similarly aged non-handicapped children.

71 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the history and major policies of a mas- sive community construction project launched by the People's Republic of China in the mid-1980s are introduced, and four characteristics of this project are highlighted: muddling through chaos, top-down control, regulated partici- pation, and community as functional establishment.
Abstract: This article briefly introduces the history and major policies of a mas- sive community construction project launched by the People's Republic of China in the mid-1980s. Based on a literature review and field observations, the authors highlight four characteristics of this project: muddling through chaos, top-down control, regulated partici- pation, and community as functional establishment. It is argued that the goal of the project is not to recreate, in China, a Western model of civil society, but to restructure the existing urban administrative structure so that it can adapt to new social demands. By transforming the grassroots neighbourhood organization - the residents' commit- tee - into a welfare provider, this project is expected to ease the state's welfare burden while maintaining its political control.

56 citations