Friday, May 31, 2019

China’s One Child Policy Violates Human Rights Essay -- Human Rights V

Although there are many facets of human rights being abused and violated every day, the Chinese would mention their fight for generative rights as one of the first and foremost in their mind. In 1979, the Chinese government passed the One-Child Policy in an attempt to control the growth of their population. While this may have been a grand idea in theory, in reality this indemnity violates the human right to form a family. By limiting the totality of children a Chinese couple is allowed to produce, this policy is effectively forcing abortion, sterilization and is taking away the Chinese familys right to make their own choices.The policy was created in 1979 and set a strong limit of one child per family. However, modern-day China is currently working off of a change proposed in 1984, which changed the policy to work off of a 1.5-child per couple. This change allowed some families to have another child, but only if their first born was a female. Most provinces have in addition allowed rural couples to have another child a few years after the birth of their first. This relaxed policy also permitted minority couples to have two or more children in an effort to increase diversity. Unfortunately, most of these amendments to the policies affect only the rural citizens of China, and provide little benefit to the urban residents. This being said, there is an smother of fairness when it comes to the rural vs. urban families. In Jiali Li and Rosemary Santana Cooneys article, Son Preference and the One-Child Policy in China 1979-1988, we learn of the different types of familial registration, and how that impacts the policy. The two types of registration depend on the location of your residency. Chinese families with Type I registrat... ...China Sticking With One-Child Policy . The New York Times, March 11, 2008, World section. meshing 3 whitethorn 2015. http//www.nytimes.com/2008/03/11/world/asia/11china.html?_r=2Yi, Zeng. race and Development Review. Options for Fertility Policy Transition in China, 215-46. Population council, 2007. Web 10 May 2015.http//www.jstor.org/stable/25434606Yuan Tien Population Studies, Vol. 18, No. 3. Sterilization, Oral Contraception, and Population Control in China, 215-35. Population Investigation Committee, 1965. Web 3 May 2015.http//www.jstor.org/stable/2173285Zhang, Junsen & Sturm, Roland. Population Research and Policy Review, Vol. 13, No. 1. When Do Couples Sign the One-Child Certificate in Urban China?, 69-81. Springer in cooperation with the Southern Demographic Association, 1994. Web 7 May 2015.http//www.jstor.org/stable/40229690

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