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Journal ArticleDOI

Clouds Over Half the Sky Women’s Prospects under Reforms

Manoranjan Mohanty
- 01 Feb 2015 - 
- Vol. 51, Iss: 1, pp 23-48
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TLDR
In this paper, the authors address the question of why despite the enormous success achieved by China in economic growth there are significant indicators showing relatively adverse life situations for women in many respects.
Abstract
This article addresses the question of why despite the enormous success achieved by China in economic growth there are significant indicators showing relatively adverse life situations for women in many respects. A falling proportion of women in the population, unfavourable employment situation, disparity in wages, inadequate representation of women in political leadership are some of the indicators of the negative fallout of the Chinese growth story even as women too have benefited from the substantial improvement of Chinese people’s livelihood conditions during the recent decades. Based on field visits to Wuxi over a thirty-year period and using macro data we argue that the Chinese experience raises serious questions about the pattern of economic growth that has been adopted by the Chinese leadership and advanced globally in recent years.

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Chinese Woman in the Construction of Western Feminism

TL;DR: In this article, it is shown that modes of writing (genres) are not evaluatively neutral but may function to articulate and reinforce existing structures of domination, and that the conceptualization of the other, the object of discourse, has effectively rationalized relations of dominance and subordination.

Clouds Over Half the Sky

Wang H
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Chinese Women Since Mao.

Judith Stacey, +1 more
- 24 Jan 1984 - 
Journal ArticleDOI

Of Women and Washing Machines: Employment, Housework, and the Reproduction of Motherhood in Socialist China*

TL;DR: The authors argue that social and economic policies since the Third Plenum of the llth Central Committee of the Chinese Communist Party have created conditions which impose on women (and men) sex-differentiated roles in production and reproduction.
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The Rise in Female Education in China: National and Regional Patterns

TL;DR: In this article, the authors trace the educational attainment of Chinese women from virtual complete illiteracy 50 years ago to current levels can be traced systematically for the first time on the basis of the 1982 census of China and a large sample survey of the same year.
Journal ArticleDOI

Approaches to Women and Development in Rural China

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors analyze the language and concepts framing approaches taken by the Chinese women's movement to women and rural development and the significance of the growing convergence between the two movements.