Family planning and women's lives in rural China

被引:29
|
作者
Hardee, K
Xie, ZM
Gu, BC
机构
[1] China Populat Informat & Res Ctr, Beijing, Peoples R China
[2] China Family Planning Assoc, Int Cooperat, Beijing, Peoples R China
来源
INTERNATIONAL FAMILY PLANNING PERSPECTIVES | 2004年 / 30卷 / 02期
关键词
D O I
10.1363/3006804
中图分类号
C921 [人口统计学];
学科分类号
摘要
CONTEXT. By 1979, China had begun implementing the so-called one-child policy, which severely restricts couples' childbearing. It is important to understand Chinese women's perceptions of how their lives have been affected by this policy and by the use of family planning. METHODS: Survey and focus group data collected in 1996 and 1998 from women in three Chinese provinces-Jiangsu, Anhui and Yunnan-were used to examine links connecting family planning and childbearing to women's lives within the family, including their relationships with spouses and other family members, and their opportunities for education, employment and social activities. RESULTS: Women related family planning to the country's economic situation and to their ability to prosper by having fewer children to support. Increased prosperity enabled them to provide for children's education and to build them houses. In Jiangsu, 73-75% of respondents who had had one child were satisfied with their number of children, regardless of sex; in Anhui and Yunnan, 54-58% of women who had one son and no daughter reported being satisfied, compared with 31-50% of women who hod one daughter and no sons. The great majority (73-99%) of women in all three provinces who had two children-regardless of sex-were satisfied with their number of children. CONCLUSIONS: Few women disputed that women's lives were better now than in the past. China's one-child policy, however, places women-particularly those in rural areas-in a situation where they are pressured by the government's childbearing requirements on one side and by society's preference for sons on the other.
引用
收藏
页码:68 / 76
页数:9
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [31] Factors influencing women's decisions regarding birth planning in a rural setting in Kenya and their implications for family planning programmes
    Obare, Francis
    Odwe, George
    Cleland, John
    JOURNAL OF BIOSOCIAL SCIENCE, 2021, 53 (06) : 935 - 947
  • [32] MEN'S INVOLVEMENT IN FAMILY PLANNING IN RURAL BANGLADESH
    Clark, Jill
    Yount, Kathryn M.
    Rochat, Roger
    JOURNAL OF BIOSOCIAL SCIENCE, 2008, 40 (06) : 815 - 840
  • [33] "Risk it"-why women who do not intend to get pregnant do not use contraception Results of the BZgA study "Women lives 3. Family planning in women's lives"
    Helfferich, Cornelia
    Holz, Janet-Lynn
    Knittel, Tilmann
    Olejniczak, Laura
    Schmidt, Franziska
    BUNDESGESUNDHEITSBLATT-GESUNDHEITSFORSCHUNG-GESUNDHEITSSCHUTZ, 2021, 64 (11) : 1408 - 1415
  • [34] Access to Money and Relation to Women's Use of Family Planning Methods Among Young Married Women in Rural India
    Reed, Elizabeth
    Donta, Balaiah
    Dasgupta, Anindita
    Ghule, Mohan
    Battala, Madhusudana
    Nair, Saritha
    Silverman, Jay
    Jadhav, Arun
    Palaye, Prajakta
    Saggurti, Niranjan
    Raj, Anita
    MATERNAL AND CHILD HEALTH JOURNAL, 2016, 20 (06) : 1203 - 1210
  • [35] Women's position and family planning in Egypt
    Govindasamy, P
    Malhotra, A
    STUDIES IN FAMILY PLANNING, 1996, 27 (06) : 328 - 340
  • [36] Women's interest in natural family planning
    Stanford, JB
    Lemaire, JC
    Thurman, PB
    JOURNAL OF FAMILY PRACTICE, 1998, 46 (01): : 65 - 71
  • [37] Access to Money and Relation to Women’s Use of Family Planning Methods Among Young Married Women in Rural India
    Elizabeth Reed
    Balaiah Donta
    Anindita Dasgupta
    Mohan Ghule
    Madhusudana Battala
    Saritha Nair
    Jay Silverman
    Arun Jadhav
    Prajakta Palaye
    Niranjan Saggurti
    Anita Raj
    Maternal and Child Health Journal, 2016, 20 : 1203 - 1210
  • [38] Bringing a women's perspective to family planning
    Sangar, Sunita
    CURRENT SCIENCE, 2018, 115 (04): : 633 - 637
  • [39] Out to Work: Migration, Gender and the Changing Lives of Rural Women in Contemporary China
    Davin, Delia
    ANTHROPOLOGICAL FORUM, 2016, 26 (02) : 202 - 203
  • [40] Out to Work: Migration, Gender, and the Changing Lives of Rural Women in Contemporary China
    Zhang, Xia
    AMERICAN ANTHROPOLOGIST, 2016, 118 (04) : 898 - 899