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Women’s Rights and Gender Equality in China: The Development and Struggle in Chains of State Feminism

Jiang, Jue

Authors

Jue Jiang



Contributors

Sarah Biddulph
Editor

Joshua Rosenzweig
Editor

Abstract

This chapter examines women’s rights and gender equality in contemporary China from the perspectives of healthcare, education, employment, politics and public life, as well as marriage and property rights. The examination shows how state feminism, which underpins a patriarchal protective model of laws and policies and embeds an instrumentalist conception of women, effectively exacerbates gender inequality and further harms women’s rights and interests in China’s traditionally ingrained patriarchal society. After China hosted the Fourth World Conference on Women in 1995, the rights-based feminist movement promoting gender equality has started to gain impetus. Nevertheless, the movement has been subject to intense suppression from the authorities that seek to uphold overall control of the regime. In this sense, an observation of contemporary Chinese feminism also provides a lens for understanding the correlation and interaction between authoritarian power and counter-power movements in China.

Citation

Jiang, J. (2019). Women’s Rights and Gender Equality in China: The Development and Struggle in Chains of State Feminism. In S. Biddulph, & J. Rosenzweig (Eds.), Handbook on Human Rights in China (253-273). Edward Elgar. https://doi.org/10.4337/9781786433688.00022

Publication Date Jun 1, 2019
Deposit Date Dec 19, 2022
Pages 253-273
Series Title Handbooks of research on contemporary China
Book Title Handbook on Human Rights in China
ISBN 9781786433671
DOI https://doi.org/10.4337/9781786433688.00022


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