This article looks at regional discrimination against daughters in China. To see where and why this discrimination occurs, it considers a number of demographic variables, such as infant and child mortality by sex as well as sex ratios of populations in East, South-East, and South Asia. It refutes the idea that rigid population control is the main cause of skewed sex ratios. An amalgam of cultural and economic factors are seen as the main contributing causes including a lack of institutionalised old age support from the state and a culture that gives the main responsibility for this to sons
High ratios of males to females in China have concerned researchers (Sen 1990, Yi et al. 1993) and t...
The apparently inexorable rise in the proportion of “missing girls” in much of East and South Asia h...
This unique and groundbreaking book seeks to re-focus gender debate onto the issue of daughter discr...
In a country like China, where son preference is principally the product of an ingrained social prej...
In the 1990s and 2000s, the People\u27s Republic of China ( PRC ) has undertaken a sustained effort ...
This paper explores the problem of China's 'missing' girls-estimated to run into many millions. It c...
In a country like China, where son preference is principally the product of an ingrained social prej...
This paper explores the problem of China's missing girls - estimated to run into many millions. It c...
Since the alarm signal was first sounded by professor Amartya Sen in 1990 works have appeared on the...
This paper seeks to explain the dearth of females in the population of China in cohorts born from th...
Asia\u27s missing girls have been the subject of a heated and ongoing debate in the press and acad...
Asia\u27s missing girls have been the subject of a heated and ongoing debate in the press and acad...
Previous research has shown the existence of severe gender discrimination in China and India dramati...
There are now 650 million women in China, almost 10 percent of the world’s population. Yet this impr...
Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/65532/1/aa.2002.104.4.1098.pd
High ratios of males to females in China have concerned researchers (Sen 1990, Yi et al. 1993) and t...
The apparently inexorable rise in the proportion of “missing girls” in much of East and South Asia h...
This unique and groundbreaking book seeks to re-focus gender debate onto the issue of daughter discr...
In a country like China, where son preference is principally the product of an ingrained social prej...
In the 1990s and 2000s, the People\u27s Republic of China ( PRC ) has undertaken a sustained effort ...
This paper explores the problem of China's 'missing' girls-estimated to run into many millions. It c...
In a country like China, where son preference is principally the product of an ingrained social prej...
This paper explores the problem of China's missing girls - estimated to run into many millions. It c...
Since the alarm signal was first sounded by professor Amartya Sen in 1990 works have appeared on the...
This paper seeks to explain the dearth of females in the population of China in cohorts born from th...
Asia\u27s missing girls have been the subject of a heated and ongoing debate in the press and acad...
Asia\u27s missing girls have been the subject of a heated and ongoing debate in the press and acad...
Previous research has shown the existence of severe gender discrimination in China and India dramati...
There are now 650 million women in China, almost 10 percent of the world’s population. Yet this impr...
Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/65532/1/aa.2002.104.4.1098.pd
High ratios of males to females in China have concerned researchers (Sen 1990, Yi et al. 1993) and t...
The apparently inexorable rise in the proportion of “missing girls” in much of East and South Asia h...
This unique and groundbreaking book seeks to re-focus gender debate onto the issue of daughter discr...