Chinese Women Continue to Make History from buzai232's blog

Chinese Women Continue to Make History

Women in China have created history in the past 12 months, but they also continued to be the subjects of sexist tropes and shocking mistreatment.To get more news about woman in ancient china, you can visit shine news official website.

While Wang Yaping became the first female astronaut to be involved in the country’s space station-building mission, and Eileen Gu, the U.S.-born freestyle skier who competed for Team China at the Beijing Winter Olympics, rose to meteoric fame, stories of a mother of eight chained to a wall, anti-feminist online campaigns, and domestic and workplace sexual abuse cases underscored the challenges and injustices women still face.

As the world marks International Women’s Day 2022, Sixth Tone takes a look at key policy changes and social movements involving women in the past months.
In May 2021, China’s central government revised its family planning strategy, allowing married couples to have as many as three children. The announcement came five years after the country scrapped its decades-long one-child policy, paving the way for couples to have two children.

The three-child policy, which was enshrined into law three months later, was introduced at a time when China faced a historic low birth rate and falling fertility. However, the new policy received a lackluster response from Chinese women who have complained of gender discrimination at the workplace during pregnancy and post-childbirth.

While experts believe that the relaxation of family planning policies alone is unlikely to dramatically increase the birth rate, policymakers have proposed better childrearing incentives at this year’s “two sessions” political meeting.
History-making feats

In October 2021, Wang Yaping became the first female astronaut involved in the country’s space station-building mission. The 42-year-old became the second female taikonaut to head to space after Liu Yang completed her mission in 2012, breaking gender barriers in the country’s male-dominated space program.

China’s female athletes also made history during the Tokyo Summer Olympics — two-thirds of the country’s gold medalists were women. Gu’s success at the Winter Olympics, as well as the Chinese women’s soccer team’s win at the 2022 AFC Women’s Asian Cup — their first title in 16 years — have inspired a new generation of young girls and women.

The sporting prowess of Chinese female athletes has also inspired social media campaigns embracing healthy beauty standards and rejecting preconceived notions of appearance and body type. However, the athletes have also faced sexist questions involving marriage and childbearing, and highlighted others challenges they face, such as pay disparity.
Amendment of Women’s Rights Law

China started substantial amendments to the country’s Women’s Rights Law in late 2021 after it was last revised in 2005. Rights activists have called the amendments “quite progressive.”

The draft of the amendments received a high level of public engagement — it amassed over 80,000 suggestions for more than 390,000 changes in just one month.

While feminists demanded the law be more specific to protect women’s rights, anti-feminists argued to abolish the law, saying many provisions could “create gender opposition” and harm the rights of Chinese men.
Trafficking of women

The viral video of a Chinese woman chained to the wall in the eastern Jiangsu province shocked the nation early this year, once again highlighting the abuses women are subject to. The story also raised several questions, including whether the woman was trafficked.

Though local authorities initially dismissed the speculations, a high-level probe last month determined that the woman, identified by police as Xiao Huamei, was a victim of human trafficking. Investigators said she was sold multiple times for as little as 5,000 yuan ($800).


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