Chinese rural left behind women

Last updated

The Chinese rural left behind women have emerged along with the rural population who has migrated in the country called internal migration after Chinese Economic Reform in the early 1980s. Usually, the rural Chinese people that were "left behind" are women identified generally as the wives whose husbands migrated from rural areas for employment or to conduct business and having an absence of at least half a year. [1] [2] [3]

Contents

These left behind women were also called left behind wives with a mean age of 38.29 years old. 82 percent of this population was aged from 31 to 45 years old [4] [5] It was estimated that the number of women left behind in Chinese rural areas is 47 to 50 million. [6] [7] [8] [9]

Individual issues

Increasing workload

Usually, after rural men migrate in the cities, women left behind in the countryside have become the major labor force in Chinese agriculture. As a consequence, the new labour division which is simply identified as the “rural men migrate to cities while their wives are left behind to take care of the agriculture and the household” has emerged in China [10] [11] [12] et al.).

Because women have been the only workforce in millions of farmer families as men's migration, besides agriculture work, these women also assumed a traditional workload, that was, doing housework, raising the children, providing care for the old people, and at the same time raising livestock and poultry to subsidize the family expenses. In addition, the divergent character of household land made it difficult to operate mechanized farming, which meant that the agricultural farming has to rely on elementary manual labor by women. Some survey in a south-western province showed that in the busy season, the women's mean work hours per day was 11 hours, among them, about 20% women had to work for more than 12 hours a day. Even in the free season, 58% of women had to work for more than 8 hours per day, 20% women more than 10 hours. Almost 80% of women reported there was no leisure time for them ( [13] [14] ).

Physical and psychological problems

Chinese rural women left behind are increasingly affected by various social, economic, and demographic changes that directly or indirectly influence their health negatively. Many surveys on Chinese women left behind reported that majority of this population has been suffering physical health problems, including reproductive tract infection, maternity disease, occupational diseases, as well as high-risk of STIs or HIV/AIDS. [15] [16] [17] [18] For example, the extreme workload generated a lot of physical problems for these rural women. One study in eastern northwestern areas indicated that 60% women who were left behind were suffering the occupational diseases such as gastric disease, strain of lumbar muscles and lumbar diapophysis caused by heavy farming workload as reported ( [19] [20]

The recent study has also alarmed that women left behind have been in a more dangerous health situation. It explained that migrant husband's return made their wives more possible to contract venereal diseases (Hu, 2007; [21] One study (Dianmin, 2002, cited in [22] )reported that between 1992 and 2002, migrants from the countryside accounted for 71% of all HIV-positive individuals in China. And another reported that when their husbands were HIV positive, married women left behind were also infected in one-third of the cases (Lurie, et al., 2003, cited in. [23] ) The report from Gansu Province, the HIV infection number is increasing among women and the migrant population was identified as one of the main reasons for the increase in HIV. [24]

With the addition of physical problem, all studies reported that women left behind have been suffering mental health problems. It was indicated by one central provincial survey that 70% of women reported suffering mental pressure, 30.8% has light or more than light mental problem (. [25] The national survey by China Agriculture University reported that 69.8% of women often feel fidgeting, 50.6% anxiety and 39% felt depressed. [26] The studies stated that these mental problems have resulted from the extreme workload, the long-term sexual repression and the anxiety about the stability of marriage and family.

Lack of security in terms of marriage

Because the together time between the couples has been decreasing, and the discrepancy of urbanization level between genders has gradually extended which tended to induce the societal heterogeneity between genders larger, the possibility of divorce rate has been consequently increasing. One sample study in a county of one central province showed that 65% of the divorce cases in 2008 were involved with rural women who were left behind. [27]

Lack of security in the community

Meantime, it was more likely for women left behind to be the victims of the crimes in the rural community where their husbands were absent. There were many extreme violent cases reported by the studies and newspapers, [28] such as violent rape, robbery. Ding [29] reposted in her survey that among sexual assault cases in the rural area, 62% of victims were women left behind, and 37% of the household left behind were the victims of the burglary.

Social consequences of the feminization of agriculture

Feminization of agriculture refers to the emerging female labor in the agriculture industry, which is the vital characteristic of current agriculture in China. This population of women left behind becomes the major productive force in the agriculture industry of rural areas. It appears that the dominance of female agriculture across many rural areas in China is a “recent social phenomenon and represents a radical shift in work patterns”. [30] The data of the First Agricultural General Census (2000) showed that women made up 77.6 percent of the agricultural productive force.

Disadvantages

Generally, women left behind would take two strategies to handle the problems of the farm labor shortage and the over workload. Those are to rearrange the agricultural model and to reduce the domestic land acreage on the premise that the household food consumption has been met. They would grow the single-season food crop instead of the multi-season or switch the agricultural products from food crop with the characteristic of low-gain and large-acreage to a commercial product with high-profit.

It seems a trend that women have operated land with extensive cultivation model. This farming model has been always accompanied by frequent natural disasters and investment increasing. All these factors generated an agriculture industry with low quality and low profit. There was no wonder that rural women would like to leave the land uncultivated as considering these adversities. The situation of leaving the land uncultivated was identified as a new problem in current Chinese rural areas. Some researchers have already showed a great anxiety about that the feminization of agriculture would negatively affect the food supplies in the national side in the long term [31] [32]

Current research

The first academic research in the nation which put left behind women as the main objective of the study did not come out until 2002. [33] After that, some research articles were published in succession, [34] [35] [36] [37] et al.). These researches were dealing with the reasons of left behind, the current situation in terms of economic, social and marriage aspects, and the recommendations for this population's development. Although these topics were different, all findings in terms of this population's issues were similar.

In sum, the studies on women left behind indicated that these women did not benefit from economic growth and national reforms similarly to other sectors of society in the nation. On the contrary, they have been found to live in a more miserably adverse fortune.

See also

Related Research Articles

Polygyny Mating system in which the male partner may have multiple partners

Polygyny is the most common and accepted form of polygamy around the world, entailing the marriage of a man with several women.

Health in China Overview of health in China

Health in China over the course of the twentieth century has gone from being a largely private and family concern, using traditional medicine, to being a major concern of the state as well. Beginning in 1905, the Qing dynasty established the first Department of Health. The Republic of China after 1912 moved to expand public health measures and to control and license medical doctors. Governments debated the value of Chinese traditional or "folk" medicine, and moved toward Western healthcare models, especially after the Chinese Nationalist Party came to power in 1928 and during the Second Sino-Japanese War (1937-1945).

Hukou is a system of household registration used in mainland China. The system itself is more properly called "huji", and has origins in ancient China; hukou is the registration of an individual in the system. A household registration record officially identifies a person as a permanent resident of an area and includes identifying information such as name, parents, spouse and date of birth. A hukou can also refer to a family register in many contexts since the household register is issued per family, and usually includes the births, deaths, marriages, divorces, and moves, of all members in the family.

Sociology of health and illness Branch of sociology

The sociology of health and illness, sociology of health and wellness, or health sociology examines the interaction between society and health. As a field of study it is interested in all aspects of life, including contemporary as well as historical influences, that impact and alter our health and wellbeing.

Women’s health in China refers to the health of women in People’s Republic of China (PRC), which is different from men’s health in China in many ways. Health, in general, is defined in the World Health Organization (WHO) constitution as “a state of complete physical, mental, and social well being and not merely the absence of disease or infirmity". The circumstance of Chinese women’s health is highly contingent upon China’s historical contexts and economic development during the past seven decades. A historical perspective on women's health in China entails examining the healthcare policies and its outcomes for women in the pre-reform period (1949-1978) and the post-reform period since 1978.

HIV/AIDS in China can be traced to an initial outbreak of the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) first recognized in 1989 among injecting drug users along China's southern border. Figures from the Chinese Center for Disease Control and Prevention, World Health Organization, and UNAIDS estimate that there were 1.25 million people living with HIV/AIDS in China at the end of 2018, with 135,000 new infections from 2017. The reported incidence of HIV/AIDS in China is relatively low, but the Chinese government anticipates that the number of individuals infected annually will continue to increase.

Social structure of China

The social structure of China has an extensive history which begins from the feudal society of Imperial China to the contemporary era. There was a Chinese nobility, beginning with the Zhou dynasty. However, after the Song dynasty, the powerful government offices were not hereditary. Instead they were selected through the imperial examination system, of written examinations based on Confucian thought, thereby undermining the power of the hereditary aristocracy.

Internal migration in the People's Republic of China is one of the most extensive in the world according to the International Labour Organization. This is because migrants in China are commonly members of a floating population, which refers primarily to migrants in China without local household registration status through the Chinese Hukou system. In general, rural-urban migrant most excluded from local educational resources, citywide social welfare programs and many jobs because of their lack of hukou status. Migrant workers are not necessarily rural workers; they can simply be people living in urban areas with rural household registration.

The economic development in India followed socialist-inspired politicians for most of its independent history, including state-ownership of many sectors; India's per capita income increased at only around 1% annualised rate in the three decades after its independence. Since the mid-1980s, India has slowly opened up its markets through economic liberalisation. After more fundamental reforms since 1991 and their renewal in the 2000s, India has progressed towards a free market economy.

Women in China Overview of the status of women in China

The lives of women in China have changed significantly due to the late Qing Dynasty reforms, the changes of the Republican period, the Chinese Civil War, and the rise of the People's Republic of China.

Poverty in China Economic issues in China

In China today, poverty refers mainly to the rural poor, decades of economic development has reduced urban extreme poverty. According to the World Bank, more than 850 million Chinese people have been lifted out of extreme poverty; China's poverty rate fell from 88 percent in 1981 to 0.7 percent in 2015, as measured by the percentage of people living on the equivalent of US$1.90 or less per day in 2011 purchasing price parity terms,which still stands in 2022.Chinese definition of extreme poverty is more stringent than that of World Bank, and is defined as earning less than $2.30 a day at purchasing power parity (PPP),Since the start of far-reaching economic reforms in the late 1970s, growth has fuelled a substantial increase in per-capita income lifting people out of extreme poverty. China's per capita income has increased fivefold between 1990 and 2000, from $200 to $1,000. Between 2000 and 2010, per capita income also rose by the same rate, from $1,000 to $5,000, moving China into the ranks of middle-income countries. Between 1990 and 2005, China's progress accounted for more than three-quarters of global poverty reduction and was largely responsible for the world reaching the UN millennium development target of dividing extreme poverty in half. This can be attributed to a combination of a rapidly expanding labour market, driven by a protracted period of economic growth, and a series of government transfers such as an urban subsidy, and the introduction of a rural pension. The World Bank Group said that the percentage of the population living below the international poverty line of $1.9 fell to 0.7 percent in 2015, and poverty line of $3.2 fell to 7% in 2015.At the end of 2018, the number of people living below China's national poverty line of ¥2,300 (CNY) per year was 16.6 million, equal to 1.7% of the population at the time.

Women in Ghana Overview of the status of women in Ghana

The status of women in Ghana and their roles in Ghanaian society has changed over the past few decades. There has been a slow increase in the political participation of Ghanaian women throughout history. Women are given equal rights under the Constitution of Ghana, yet disparities in education, employment, and health for women remain prevalent. Additionally, women have much less access to resources than men in Ghana do. Ghanaian women in rural and urban areas face slightly different challenges. Throughout Ghana, female-headed households are increasing.

Women in Angola Overview of the status of women in Angolq

Although almost no research existed on the role of women in Angolan society in the late 1980s, there are a few generalities that could be drawn. In rural Angola, as in many African economies, most of the population engaged in agricultural activities. Women performed much of the agricultural labor. Marriage generally involved familial, political, and economic interests as well as personal considerations and gains. The household was the most important unit of production and was usually composed of several generations. The women grew and prepared most of the food for the household and performed all other domestic work. Because of their major role in food production, women shared relatively equal status with men, who spent much of their time hunting or tending cattle.

HIV/AIDS in Malawi Impact of the immunodeficiency virus in the Southeastern African nation

As of 2012, approximately 1,100,000 people in Malawi are HIV-positive, which represents 10.8% of the country's population. Because the Malawian government was initially slow to respond to the epidemic under the leadership of Hastings Banda (1966–1994), the prevalence of HIV/AIDS increased drastically between 1985, when the disease was first identified in Malawi, and 1993, when HIV prevalence rates were estimated to be as high as 30% among pregnant women. The Malawian food crisis in 2002 resulted, at least in part, from a loss of agricultural productivity due to the prevalence of HIV/AIDS. Various degrees of government involvement under the leadership of Bakili Muluzi (1994–2004) and Bingu wa Mutharika (2004–2012) resulted in a gradual decline in HIV prevalence, and, in 2003, many people living in Malawi gained access to antiretroviral therapy. Condoms have become more widely available to the public through non-governmental organizations, and more Malawians are taking advantage of HIV testing services.

Geriatric depression is the prolonged occurrence of depression in elderly-aged people. A meta-analysis done by the University of Liverpool found a 3.86% prevalence rate of depressed elderly in The People's Republic of China, compared to a 12% prevalence in Western Europe. Factors for depression in Chinese elderly are affected by Chinese culture, social expectations, and living conditions. There is dispute to whether the low-level reported rates are due to differences in culture and traditions.

Sociology in China

In the People's Republic of China, the study of sociology has been developing steadily since its reestablishment in 1979. Chinese sociology has a strong focus on applied sociology, and has become an important source of information for Chinese policymakers.

Left-behind children in China Social phenomenon due to migration

The left-behind children in China, also called "stay-at-home children", are children who remain in rural regions of China while their parents leave to work in urban areas. In many cases, these children are taken care of by their extended families, usually by grandparents or family friends, who remain in the rural regions.

Domestic violence is prominent in Nigeria as in other parts of Africa. There is a deep cultural belief in Nigeria that it is socially acceptable to hit a woman as a disciplinary measure. Cases of Domestic violence are on the high and show no signs of reduction in Nigeria, regardless of the age, tribe, religion or even social status. The CLEEN Foundation reports 1 in every 3 respondents admitting to being a victim of domestic violence. The survey also found a nationwide increase in domestic violence in the past 3 years from 21% in 2011 to 30% in 2013. A CLEEN Foundation's 2012 National Crime and Safety Survey demonstrated that 31% of the national sample confessed to being victims of domestic violence.

Missing women of China is a widely known phenomenon referring to the unusual shortfall of female population resulting from cultural influences and government policy. The term "missing women" was coined by economist Amartya Sen, winner of the 1998 Nobel Memorial Prize in Economic Sciences, to describe a distorted population sex ratio in which the number of males far outweighed the number of females. Female disadvantages in child survival throughout China reflects a long pattern of sex-based discrimination. Preferences for sons are common in China owing to their ability to carry on family names, their wealth inheritance, and the idea that they are typically the ones to care for their parents once they are older. Limiting the ability for parents to have numerous children forces them to think of logical and long term reasons to have a male or female child. Chinese parents are known to favor large families, and to prefer sons over daughters in efforts to create more directed family resources. The result of the discrimination and male preference is a shortfall of women and an extremely unbalanced sex ratio in the population of China. China's sex-ratio is comparatively the most skewed of any country in the global sphere.

Zhu Ling is a Chinese economist who served as the deputy director and researcher in the Institute of Economics, Chinese Academy of Social Sciences (CASS), professor of graduate school and supervisor of doctorate student at Institute of Economics, CASS. She was elected a member of CASS in 2010. Previously, she was an executive member at International Association of Agricultural Economics (IAAE), Vice president of the Chinese Agricultural & Applied Economics Association, and had joined the research group of Millennium Development Goals of the United Nations.

References

  1. Huang, A. L.,(2007), the Survey and Reflection on Living Situation of Rural Women Left Behind, Agricultural Science Bulletin in Anhui, 2007, Vol.13, p 14-15.
  2. Lin, G. F., & Huang, W. Sh., 2007, Analysis of the Social Status of Rural Women Left Behind, Anhui Literature Journal, 2007, Vol. 4, p163-164.
  3. Zhou, F. L., 2007, Analysis of the Living Condition of Rural Left Behind Wives, the Journal of Northwest Population Study, 2007, Vol. 1
  4. Zhou, F. L., 2007, Analysis of the Living Condition of Rural Left Behind Wives, the Journal of Northwest Population Study, 2007, Vol. 1.
  5. Liang, X. L., Mao ,Ch., 2007, the significance of Rural Women Left Behind's Issues during the Process of New Countryside Construction, Academy Journal of Chinese Communist Party School In Nanchang, 2007, Vol.5, Issue 2, p 61-63.
  6. Fan, P. (2006), Developmental Report of Chinese Framer, Rui, X., et al. (Ed.), 2006: China's Social Situation Analysis and Prediction, Sociological Science Press.
  7. Xu, Ch. X. (2007), Constructing the Social Network for Rural Women Left Behind, National Conditions and Power in China, 2007, Vol. 3, p47-49, 2007.
  8. Liang, X. L., Mao, Ch., 2007, the significance of Rural Women Left Behind's Issues during the Process of New Countryside Construction, Academy Journal of Chinese Communist Party School In Nanchang, 2007, Vol.5, Issue 2, p 61-63.
  9. Lin, G. F., & Huang, W. Sh., 2007, Analysis of the Social Status of Rural Women Left Behind, Anhui Literature Journal, 2007, Vol. 4, p163-164.
  10. Fan, P. (2006), Developmental Report of Chinese Framer, Rui, X., et al (Ed.), 2006: China's Social Situation Analysis and Prediction, Sociological Science Press.
  11. Zheng, Zh. Zh., & Xie, Zh. M. (2004); the Population Floating and the Development of Rural Women, Sociological Science Press.
  12. Zhu, M. & Ying, R. P.(2005), the Reflection on Economic Value of Rural Left Behind Wives’ Housework from Sociological Perspective, Academy Journal of Hunan Agricultural University (Social Science Version), 2005, Vol.6, Issue 6, P5-7.
  13. Zhu, H. Zh.(2007), The Issues Study on Rural Women Left Behind, Academy Journal in Lanzhou,2007, Vol. 10.
  14. Zhou, F. L., 2007, Analysis of the Living Condition of Rural Left Behind Wives, the Journal of Northwest Population Study, 2007, Vol. 1.
  15. Zhu, G.Q., (2006), The Psychological Health Survey on Rural Women Left Behind, Journal of Tianzhong, 2006, Vol.21, No.4, 135-137, 2006.
  16. Zhou, F. L., 2007, Analysis of the Living Condition of Rural Left Behind Wives, the Journal of Northwest Population Study, 2007, Vol. 1.
  17. Zhu, H. Zh.(2007), The Issues Study on Rural Women Left Behind, Academy Journal in Lanzhou,2007, Vol. 10.
  18. Hong, H., et al. (2009), Long-term Follow-up of a Peer-led HIV/AIDS Prevention Program for Married Women in Rural China, International Journal of Gynecology and Obstetrics, 106(2009), 69-70.
  19. Zhu, H. Zh.(2007), The Issues Study on Rural Women Left Behind, Academy Journal in Lanzhou,2007, Vol. 10.
  20. Zhou, Q. X., Zeng, Z., Nie, Z. M., (2007), Investigation on Women Staying at Home in Rural Areas---an Investigation from Chongqing Municipality, Journal of China Women's University, 2007, Vol.19, No.1, 64-66.
  21. Zhou, Q. X., Zeng, Z., Nie, Z. M., (2007), Investigation on Women Staying at Home in Rural Areas---an Investigation from Chongqing Municipality, Journal of China Women's University, 2007, Vol.19, No.1, 64-66.
  22. Hong, H., et al. (2009), Long-term Follow-up of a Peer-led HIV/AIDS Prevention Program for Married Women in Rural China, International Journal of Gynecology and Obstetrics, 106(2009), 69-70.
  23. Hong, H., Qin, Q. R., et al. (2009), Condom Use among Married Women at Risk for Sexually Transmitted Infections and HIV in Rural China, International Journal of Gynecology and Obstetrics, 106(2009), 262-265.
  24. http://www.womenofchina.cn/Data_Research/Latest_Statistics/214196.jsp%5B%5D
  25. Zhu, G.Q., (2006), The Psychological Health Survey on Rural Women Left Behind, Journal of Tianzhong, 2006, Vol.21, No.4, 135-137.
  26. Ye, J., Zh. (2008), the Study on Rural Women Left Behind, China Agriculture University Press.
  27. "马山县农村留守妇女婚姻状况分析与对策". 2008-08-21. Archived from the original on 2011-06-05. Retrieved 2010-05-20.
  28. "男子抢劫强奸农村留守妇女 3年作案50起--新农村--人民网". nc.people.com.cn. Archived from the original on 14 May 2010. Retrieved 13 January 2022.
  29. Ding, C. R. (2007), the Survey and Reflection on the Life Situation of Rural Women Left Behind, Scientifical Technology (Academic Version), 2007, Vol,26.
  30. Jacka, T., (1997), Women's Work in Rural China. Cambridge University Press.p132.
  31. Wu, H. F., & Rao, J. (2009), the Impact of Feminization of Agriculture on The Development of Chinese Agriculture, Agriculture Technical Economy, Retrieved from http://www.agri.ac.cn/DecRef/AgriDeve/200905/60258.html Archived 2011-07-07 at the Wayback Machine .
  32. Lin, Z. B., Qiu, G. J. (2001), the Potential Impact of Globalization on Chinese Women in the Agriculture Field, Women Studies, 2001, Vol.1.
  33. Zhang, H. H., 2002, Analysis of the Causes of Rural Women Left Behind and Their Business Activities, Academy Journal of Guizhou Minzhu College, 2002, Vol.6, p59-61, 2002.
  34. Zhou, F. L., 2007, Analysis of the Living Condition of Rural Left Behind Wives, the Journal of Northwest Population Study, 2007, Vol.1.
  35. Wei, C. N. (2006), the Study on Rural Women Left Behind, Nanjing Normal University Journal, 2006.
  36. Ye, J., Zh. (2008), the Study on Rural Women Left Behind, China Agriculture University Press.
  37. Wu, H. F., & Rao, J. (2009), Review on Chinese Rural Women Left Behind, China Agricultural University Journal of Social Science Edition, 2009, Vol.26 No.2,18-22.