Rural livelihoods in China: political economy in transition
In: Routledge explorations in development studies
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In: Routledge explorations in development studies
In: Routledge explorations in development studies
In recent decades, China has undergone rapid economic growth, industrialisation and urbanisation concomitant with deep and extensive structural and social change, profoundly reshaping the country's development landscape and urban-rural relationships. This book applies livelihoods approaches to deepen our understanding of the changes and continuities related to rural livelihoods within the wider context of political economy of development in post-socialist China, bridging the urban and rural scenarios and probing the local, national and global dynamics that have impacted on livelihood, in parti.
In: Journal of current Chinese affairs, Volume 38, Issue 4, p. 3-7
ISSN: 1868-4874
In: The China quarterly, Volume 195, p. 696-698
ISSN: 1468-2648
In: Journal of international development: the journal of the Development Studies Association, Volume 16, Issue 8, p. 1155-1168
ISSN: 0954-1748
In: Journal of international development, Volume 16, Issue 8, p. 1155-1168
World Affairs Online
In: Development and change, Volume 30, Issue 1, p. 21-41
ISSN: 1467-7660
The spontaneous, large‐scale population movement from the countryside to the cities witnessed in China since the early 1980s has drawn increasing attention in academic circles. However, research has tended to focus on quantitative macro‐level data collection and interpretation rather than on the experiences of those involved in the migratory process. Using qualitative research methods, this article presents the experiences and perceptions of the Chinese rural female migrants as narrated by themselves. It attempts to identify by this means the major forces behind rural women's out‐migration and the institutional changes and structural barriers that have shaped women's lives and experiences in the migratory process. The author argues that women are actors and agents in this unprecedented economic and social transformation. Through their active engagement in the urban labour market, female migrants have challenged both the traditionally defined gender roles and the spatial and socio‐economic boundaries that have been structurally designated to them. Their actions may catalyse a radical rearrangement of the social, political and sexual orders.
In: Issues & studies: a social science quarterly on China, Taiwan, and East Asian affairs, Volume 33, Issue 5, p. 80-101
ISSN: 1013-2511
World Affairs Online
The paper examines some of the main political economy dynamics of the policy initiatives on rural development that have been taken since 2003, and provides an overview of the main issues that they are addressing. The paper first outlines the major agrarian problems that have emerged over the recent decade and more, indicating their main political-economy causations, and then systematically analyses the prospects of the new policy initiatives to deal with them. Among the new policies the initiatives to reorganise the finance system through a reform of the roles of the county and a development of town and township governments to become points of delivery of public goods and social services are highlighted as particularly potent. Further importance is associated with reforms that strengthen the role of rural residents as citizens. The impact of the Chinese government's economic stimulus package in response to the ongoing global financial crisis is yet to become visible, but it is clear that the changes must be backed up with very substantial political and financial commitments.
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In: Public administration and development: the international journal of management research and practice, Volume 24, Issue 1, p. 41-50
ISSN: 1099-162X
AbstractThis article reviews the way in which three very different international organisations concerned with reproductive health policy responded to the reproductive rights agenda during the 1990s. The intention is not to evaluate these responses but to describe how these organisations saw their roles with respect to establishing and promoting reproductive rights in developing countries. We seek to explore their different strategies of defining and interpreting rights, to examine the imperatives behind these strategies and to consider how these variously fed into the practical actions and agendas with which these organisations were engaged. The organisations included were the Women's Global Network for Reproductive Rights, the International Federation of Family Planning Associations and the UK's Department for International Development. Their diverse understandings about implementing reproductive rights contribute to a plural political environment in which these rights and their interpretation are debated. For all the three, their particular conception of reproductive rights is an important organising principle through which their efforts around reproductive health are given wider meaning. Copyright © 2004 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.
In: Public administration and development: the international journal of management research and practice, Volume 24, Issue 1, p. 41-50
ISSN: 0271-2075
In: Public administration and development: the international journal of management research and practice, Volume 24, Issue 1
ISSN: 0271-2075
In: Women's studies international forum, Volume 25, Issue 4, p. 443-453
In: IGU marginal regions series
In: Marginal Regions (and In Association with IGU - Dynamics of Marginal and Critical Regions)
Economic transition in China has witnessed (re)centralization of resources from the margin to the core in economic, social and political senses. This book employs a marginalization lens to reveal, delineate and better understand the processes, patterns, trends, multiple dimensions and dynamics of the phenomenon, and the consequences and implications for development and well-being in the country