Information technologies, policy leverage, and the entrepreneurial spirit: building cross-sectoral collaboration for disability employment in China
In: Journal of Asian public policy, Band 13, Heft 2, S. 208-226
ISSN: 1751-6242
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In: Journal of Asian public policy, Band 13, Heft 2, S. 208-226
ISSN: 1751-6242
In: Society and natural resources, Band 34, Heft 4, S. 484-504
ISSN: 1521-0723
In: Social Inclusion, Band 8, Heft 2, S. 36-46
ISSN: 2183-2803
As China's one-child policy is replaced by the two-child policy, young Chinese women and their spouses are increasingly concerned about who will take care of the 'second child.' Due to the absence of public childcare services and the rising cost of privatised care services in China, childcare provision mainly relies on families, such that working women's choices of childbirth, childcare and employment are heavily constrained. To deal with structural barriers, young urban mothers mobilise grandmothers as joint caregivers. Based on interviews with Guangzhou middle-class families, this study examines the impact of childcare policy reform since 1978 on childbirth and childcare choices of women. It illustrates the longstanding contributions and struggles of women, particularly grandmothers, engaged in childcare. It also shows that intergenerational parenting involves a set of practices of intergenerational intimacy embedded in material conditions, practical acts of care, moral values and power dynamics. We argue that the liberation, to some extent, of young Chinese mothers from childcare is at the expense of considerable unpaid care work from grandmothers rather than being driven by increased public care services and improved gender equality in domestic labour. Given the significant stress and seriously constrained choices in later life that childcare imposes, grandmothers now become reluctant to help rear a second grandchild. This situation calls for changes in family policies to increase the supply of affordable and good-quality childcare services, enhance job security in the labour market, provide supportive services to grandmothers and, most importantly, prioritise the wellbeing of women and families over national goals.
In: Journal of Asian public policy, Band 10, Heft 2, S. 167-182
ISSN: 1751-6242
In: Current urban studies, Band 12, Heft 2, S. 107-122
ISSN: 2328-4919
In: Current Urban Studies, Band 10, Heft 2, S. 275-292
ISSN: 2328-4919
In: The journal of environment & development: a review of international policy, Band 28, Heft 1, S. 78-105
ISSN: 1552-5465
Using data from the China Social Survey 2013 and statistics from the Ministry of Environment Protection of China and the Institute of Public & Environment Affairs, this study empirically examines the relationship between actual and perceived air pollution and the moderating effect of environmental transparency on that relationship with a multilevel ordered logistic strategy. Estimations indicate a significant congruence of actual (both particulate matter less than 10 µm in diameter and sulfur dioxide) and perceived air pollution. More importantly, environmental transparency of local government is found to moderate the relationship between actual and perceived air pollution by neutralizing the halo effects and building more alert perceptions when local air quality deteriorates. Our findings not only challenge the work of identifying a mismatch of actual–perceived air pollution in some developed countries but also suggest that, apart from abating actual air pollution, environmental transparency should be emphasized and strengthened in institutional buildings to help address pollution challenges in developing countries.