Gender Stereotypes In China In The 1980's

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Before 1980’s an average family in China had approximately four children and the population was getting out of hand which led to food shortage and famine. The communist party took in charge of the problem during 1980’s and restricted one child per couple in order to stabilize water and food supplies. The goal was to keep the population under 1.2 billion by the end of the twentieth century. Since 1980 doctors all over China, doctors have performed 196 sterilizations and 336 abortions to help maintain the policy. Due to China being a patriarchal society, abortion, parental sex selection, and other causes are the reason behind 60 million lost girls because the desire to conceive sons are a significant part of the Chinese tradition. This has effects on the birth ratio of males to females, there are about 144 males to 100 females. China …show more content…
As previously stated China is a patriarchal society and gender inequality is deeply rooted in the Chinese tradition. Sons are known to carry on the lineage and take care of the parents when they are old and daughters are just a financial burden because they do what they are asked to. Daughters are ought to be married and their husband 's properties so it is better to invest in a son because it will pay off. Sons are valued a lot more, however, there aren’t enough women for every man in China, which would make us think that people have started valuing women as well. Wrong, its the exact opposite, Human trafficking. “About 10,000 to 20,000 victims are trafficked within China every year. Ninety percent of these victims are poor women and

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