China’s new policy of allowing couples to have three children (replacing the previous limit of two) is an attempt to respond to ageing population concerns and a slowing birth rate. But the policy’s implications for working women and their families mean few will welcome the change with open arms
Simone Eliane Schwank,1 Chunyi Gu,2 Zhouli Cao,3 Ewa Andersson,4 Hongli Jiang,5 Yan Ding,2 Helena Li...
For more about the East-West Center, see http://www.eastwestcenter.org/In 1970, Chinese women were h...
People’s Republic of China is not only the fastest growing economy in the world, but with the larges...
In 2021, China amended its Population and Family Planning Law for the second time in an attempt to i...
In October, 2015, China's one-child policy was replaced by a universal two-child policy. The ef...
Since 1978, China’s One-Child Policy has been decreasing the nation’s population numbers to make way...
New Chinese policy currently allows couples to have two children. It was introduced in the hope that...
The One Child Policy in China was implemented in 1979, and lasted until 2016 when it was changed int...
In 1979. China introduced the legislation of the One-Child Policy to be implemented as a temporary m...
The so called “one-child policy” has brought economic benefits in China for the three decades since ...
The population problem has always been a fundamental, overall and strategic issue faced by the human...
To ease the aging process of the population and change the situation that the fertility rate continu...
In November 2013,China issued a new population policy to ease the three-decade-long birth control po...
In October, 2015, China's one-child policy was replaced by a universal two-child policy. The effects...
by the one-child-per-couple policy (the one child policy), has been one of the largest and most dram...
Simone Eliane Schwank,1 Chunyi Gu,2 Zhouli Cao,3 Ewa Andersson,4 Hongli Jiang,5 Yan Ding,2 Helena Li...
For more about the East-West Center, see http://www.eastwestcenter.org/In 1970, Chinese women were h...
People’s Republic of China is not only the fastest growing economy in the world, but with the larges...
In 2021, China amended its Population and Family Planning Law for the second time in an attempt to i...
In October, 2015, China's one-child policy was replaced by a universal two-child policy. The ef...
Since 1978, China’s One-Child Policy has been decreasing the nation’s population numbers to make way...
New Chinese policy currently allows couples to have two children. It was introduced in the hope that...
The One Child Policy in China was implemented in 1979, and lasted until 2016 when it was changed int...
In 1979. China introduced the legislation of the One-Child Policy to be implemented as a temporary m...
The so called “one-child policy” has brought economic benefits in China for the three decades since ...
The population problem has always been a fundamental, overall and strategic issue faced by the human...
To ease the aging process of the population and change the situation that the fertility rate continu...
In November 2013,China issued a new population policy to ease the three-decade-long birth control po...
In October, 2015, China's one-child policy was replaced by a universal two-child policy. The effects...
by the one-child-per-couple policy (the one child policy), has been one of the largest and most dram...
Simone Eliane Schwank,1 Chunyi Gu,2 Zhouli Cao,3 Ewa Andersson,4 Hongli Jiang,5 Yan Ding,2 Helena Li...
For more about the East-West Center, see http://www.eastwestcenter.org/In 1970, Chinese women were h...
People’s Republic of China is not only the fastest growing economy in the world, but with the larges...