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White paper:
Gender Equality in China
China State Council Information Office
The State Council Information Office published
on Wednesday, 24 August 2005 a white paper
entitled Gender Equality and Women's Development
in China. The nine-chapter document discusses
the progress China has made in promoting gender
equality and women's development over the last
decade. The full text of the white paper
follows:
Foreword
I. State Mechanism to Promote Gender Equality
and Development of Women
II. Women
and the Economy
III. Women and Poverty Elimination
IV. Women's Participation in Decision Making and
Management
V. Women and
Education
VI. Women and
Health
VII. Women, Marriage and the Family
VIII. Women and the Environment
IX. Legal Guarantees of Women's Rights and
Interests
Conclusion
******************************
Foreword
China is a developing country with the largest
population in the world. Of its total population
of 1.3 billion, women account for about half.
Therefore, the promotion of gender equality and
the overall development of women is not only of
great significance for China's development, it
also has a special influence on the efforts for
the advancement of mankind.
It has always been a basic state policy of China
to promote equality between men and women. Since
New China was founded in 1949, especially since
the adoption of the reform and opening-up policy
in the late 1970s, and along with the continuous
growth of China's economy and the overall
progress of its society, women are being given
more guarantees of enjoyment of equal rights and
opportunities with men and the development of
women is being given unprecedented
opportunities.
In recent years, the Chinese government has made
fairness and justice, with gender equality
included, an important part of efforts to build
a harmonious socialist society, and has utilized
economic, legal, administrative, public opinion
and other measures to ensure that women enjoy
equal rights with men in terms of politics,
economy, culture, and social and family life,
and continuously pushes forward women's
development in an all-round way.
The Beijing Declaration and the Platform for
Action adopted at the Fourth UN World Conference
on Women held in Beijing in 1995 have produced
great influence in promoting the progress of
gender equality and women's development around
the world. To commemorate the 10th anniversary
of the conference, this white paper has been
prepared to introduce to the rest of the world
China's progress in promoting gender equality
and women's development over the past decade.
I. State Mechanism to Promote Gender Equality
and Development of Women
To promote gender equality and the development
of women, China is making unremitting efforts to
improve its legal system to protect the rights
and interests of women, formulate and implement
programs regarding women's development, further
improve relevant working organs, increase
financial input and strengthen social awareness.
The state has continuously intensified its
efforts in the formulation, revision and
enforcement of relevant laws and regulations to
protect the legitimate rights and interests of
women in earnest. As the supreme organ of state
power and the top legislative organ of China,
the National People's Congress and its Standing
Committee have taken the protection of women's
rights and interests and the promotion of gender
equality as a key assignment, paid great
attention to the formulation of laws concerning
women, seriously dealt with bills related to the
protection of women's legitimate rights and
interests, and actively urged and supervised the
enforcement and implementation of relevant laws.
The Chinese government and its departments
concerned have enforced laws and formulated and
implemented relevant administrative rules and
regulations to guarantee women's rights and
interests, and promote gender equality. China
now has built a complete legal system concerning
the protection of women's rights and interests,
and promotion of gender equality, based on the
Constitution of the People's Republic of China,
and with the Law of the People's Republic of
China on the Protection of Rights and Interests
of Women as the main body and various separate
laws and regulations, local regulations and
administrative rules adopted by various
government departments as supplementary
provisions. The state judicial organs have
augmented their law enforcement steps, and
punished the perpetrators of various kinds of
criminal infringements of women's rights and
interests in accordance with the law.
The state has enacted and implemented outlines
for the development of women, and included
women's development in the overall plans of
economic and social development. The Outline for
the Development of Chinese Women is a national
program of action to carry out the Platform for
Action adopted in 1995 in Beijing and push
forward gender equality and women's development
in a comprehensive way. Since the goals set in
the Outline for the Development of Chinese Women
(1995-2000) have been basically realized, and to
meet the demands of China's coordinated economic
and social development and the requirements of
the UN Millennium Development Goals, China
promulgated in 2001 its Outline for the
Development of Chinese Women (2001-2010). The
new document outlines 34 major goals and 100
policies and measures in six fields: women and
the economy; women's participation in
decision-making and administration; women and
education; women and health; women and the law;
and women and the environment. The departments
concerned under the State Council and local
governments at all levels have all worked out
their own programs for the implementation of the
outline and plans for women's development in
their respective areas.
The National Working Committee on Children and
Women (NWCCW) under the State Council, the
coordination and consultation organ of the
Chinese government in charge of women and
children's work, plays an important role in
coordinating and promoting relevant government
departments to do women and children's work
well, as well as in formulating and organizing
the implementation of the outlines for the
development of women and children, providing
necessary human, financial and material
resources to the work on women and children and
to the development of women and children's
cause, and guiding, encouraging and supervising
the work of its subordinates in all provinces,
autonomous regions and municipalities directly
under the central government. The current NWCCW
is headed by a vice-premier of the State
Council, and is composed of 33 member units
(ministries, commissions under the State Council
and non-governmental organizations - ed.) each
having one of its vice-ministerial-level
officials as a member of the NWCCW. To date,
working organs on children and women have been
set up by the people's governments of all
provinces, autonomous regions and municipalities
directly under the central government,
prefectures (prefecture-level cities and
leagues) and counties (county-level cities,
districts and banners) across China's mainland,
which are under the direction of officials of
governments at the corresponding level. An
effective working system has been built within
these working committees to coordinate the
functional departments and urge them to perform
their duties. Their expenditures are covered in
the financial budgets of the governments at the
corresponding level.
The Chinese government attaches importance to
the role of non-governmental organizations
(NGOs) related to the development of women. The
All-China Women's Federation, All-China
Federation of Trade Unions, Central Committee of
the Communist Youth League, China Disabled
Persons' Federation and China Association of
Science and Technology have all effectively
pressed ahead with their gender equality work in
line with their respective guidelines. The
All-China Women's Federation (ACWF) is the
largest NGO in China dedicated to promoting
gender equality and women's development. It has
an organizational system that covers women's
federations and group members at various levels,
and enjoys wide representation and mass
involvement. The ACWF and local women's
federations play a significant role in uniting
and motivating women to participate in the
country's economic construction and social
development, encouraging them to take an active
part in the democratic management and
supervision of state and social affairs, and
representing and safeguarding the rights and
interests of women as a whole. In recent years,
government departments have cooperated with
women's federations and other NGOs to organize
all kinds of activities to effectively utilize
social resources for the promotion of gender
equality and women's development.
The central and local treasuries have both
increased their inputs for the implementation of
the outline for the development of women year by
year, and optimized the allocation of resources
to facilitate women's development. Since 2000,
quite an amount of funds have been appropriated
from the central and local treasuries to help
achieve the key and difficult objectives that
are difficult to fulfill in the outlines, with
priority being given to the western and
poverty-stricken areas. In 1990, the state input
into women and children's health care and
epidemic prevention and treatment stood at 305
million yuan and 1.203 billion yuan,
respectively, which rose to 1.046 billion yuan
and 3.388 billion yuan in 1999, and further to
1.579 billion yuan and 9.054 billion yuan in
2003. The state also pays great attention to the
collection and study of statistics about the
situation as regards women, and has set up a
special organ to monitor and assess the
implementation of the outline, and formulated a
statistical monitoring indicator system and
assessment program. In addition, networks for
statistics monitoring and working systems have
been established in various provinces,
autonomous regions and municipalities directly
under the central government. With the
continuous improvement of the
statistics-gathering and analysis systems by the
departments concerned and gender statistics
indicators added, a complete national gender
statistics system has taken shape and is being
constantly improved. Over the past decade,
materials on gender statistics have been
compiled and published by the state departments
of statistics.
The Chinese government sets great store by
cooperation with the United Nations and other
international organizations, and has actively
strengthened its exchanges and cooperation with
other governments and women's organizations
around the world. China is serious about
implementing international conventions. In May
2000, it submitted to the United Nations The
Report on the Implementation Result of the
People's Republic of China of the "Beijing
Declaration" and the "Platform for Action"
Adopted by the Fourth World Conference on Women
in 1995; in February 2004, it submitted The
Fifth and Sixth Regular Reports on the
Implementation of the UN "Convention on the
Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination
Against Women;" and in March 2005, it submitted
The Report on the Implementation of the People's
Republic of China of the "Beijing Platform for
Action" (1995) and the Document of Results of
the 23rd UN General Assembly Special Session
(2000).
II.
Women and the Economy
The state has made the guarantee of equal
employment opportunities between women and men
and the sharing of economic resources and
results of social development the top priority
for the advancement of gender equality and the
development of women, and has worked out and
adopted a series of policies and measures to
ensure that women can equally participate in the
economic development, enjoy equal access to
economic resources and effective services,
enhance their self-development ability and
improve their social and economic status.
Encouraging women to start business and become
re-employed. Employment is the basis of people's
livelihood and the basic economic resource that
women rely on for subsistence. Over the past few
years, the Chinese government has formulated and
carried out supportive policies to encourage
women to start businesses on their own
initiative, and give them preferential treatment
when granting employment training subsidies and
small-sum guaranteed loans and conducting tax
reduction and exemption. In the meantime,
governments at all levels have adopted many
favorable policies toward women, such as
creating public-welfare jobs, opening employment
service centers, sponsoring special recruitment
activities and vocational training courses,
monitoring sex discrimination against women in
employment and help women, especially laid-off
women, to find new jobs. With the support of the
government, women's federations at various
levels, trade unions and other NGOs have
conducted their work regarding the employment
and re-employment of women in a creative way.
During the period from 1998 to 2003, women's
federations nationwide endeavored to get
small-sum credit loans to directly aid a total
of 2.5 million women to get re-employed. Over
the past decade, the number and ratio of women
employed have remained fairly high. By the end
of 2004, the number of both urban and rural
women workers reached 337 million nationwide,
accounting for 44.8 percent of the total
employed; and the number of women workers in
urban work units stood at 42.27 million,
accounting for 38.1 percent of the national
total.
Improving the employment structure of women.
Over the past few years, the tertiary industry
has become the main channel for providing jobs
to women, and an increasing number of women are
entering the computer, communications, finance
and insurance and other high- and new-tech
industries, thus becoming an important force in
these fields. At present, women owners of small
and medium-sized enterprises account for about
20 percent of the national total number of
entrepreneurs, and 60 percent of them have
emerged in the past decade. State organs,
enterprises and public institutions have long
pursued the principle of equality between men
and women in terms of recruitment, training of
professionals and technicians, as well as
promotion in ranks and granting of professional
titles to encourage women to display their
abilities and come to the fore. By the end of
2004, women accounted for 43.6 percent of the
total number of professionals and technicians in
state-owned enterprises and institutions
nationwide, up 6.3 percentage points over the
37.3 percent of 1995, among whom, the number of
senior and intermediate-level women
professionals and technicians rose from 20.1
percent and 33.4 percent to 30.5 percent and
42.0 percent, respectively.
Enhancing social security for urban women. In
recent years, the Chinese government has stepped
up the construction of a social security system,
with pension insurance, unemployment insurance,
medical insurance, employment injury insurance
and maternity insurance as the main contents. It
has also carried out significant reforms of the
urban social relief system, and gradually
established and improved three funds: minimum
urban living guarantee fund, basic living
guarantee for laid-off workers fund and
unemployment guarantee fund. The Trial Measures
for Maternity Insurance of Enterprise Employees
the state promulgated in 1994 put maternity
insurance, which used to be borne by employers,
under overall social planning. By the end of
2004, the practice of overall social planning
had been introduced in 28 provinces, autonomous
regions and municipalities directly under the
central government, with 43.84 million
employees, or 60 percent of the total number of
urban employees covered. In October 1999, the
Regulations on the Minimum Standard of Living
for Urban Residents went into effect. By the end
of 2004, 22.05 million urban residents,
including women, were receiving minimum
subsistence allowances. All those who needed
such help were by and large covered.
Giving full play to women's role in the rural
economy. China is basically an agricultural
country, and women account for more than 60
percent of the rural labor force and are a major
force in farming activities. The Law of the
People's Republic of China on Rural Land
Contracting, which came into effect in 2003,
states that women and men enjoy equal rights in
contracting land in rural areas, and no
organization or individual shall deprive women
of the right to contract and operate land or
infringe upon their right to do so. In recent
years, the Chinese government has adopted active
policies and measures to solve the problems
concerning agriculture, rural areas and farmers,
increased its input into agriculture, pushed
forward tax reform in rural areas, and
implemented the strategy of invigorating
agriculture by applying science and technology.
Government departments and women's federations
at all levels have jointly organized activities
to encourage rural women to acquire knowledge
and learn science and technology, and compete in
their development and contributions, so as to
bring their role in invigorating and developing
the rural economy into full play.
Safeguarding the legitimate rights and interests
of rural women working in cities. Over the past
few years, the Chinese government has gradually
reduced or eliminated the restrictive
regulations on the employment of rural people in
cities, and made great efforts to solve the
problems of salaries in arrears, vocational
safety, equal pay for equal work and social
security for them so as to relieve rural migrant
workers of anxieties regarding residence
registration in cities and the schooling of
their children, and actively protects the
legitimate rights and interests of rural women
working in cities. At the same time, the state
also encourages and supports the building of
training schools and legal aid centers, and the
publication of typical cases of infringement as
a means to raise awareness of their rights among
migrant women workers and enhance their ability
to safeguard their rights in accordance with the
law.
To actively promote gender equality in
employment and raise women's ability to find
employment or start businesses, the Chinese
government has begun to cooperate with the
United Nations Development Program,
International Labor Organization and other
international organizations, with satisfactory
results. At present, it is accelerating,
proceeding from the national conditions of
China, the process for the approval of the UN's
Discrimination (Employment and Occupation)
Convention in China.
III. Women and Poverty Elimination
To alleviate and eliminate poverty is a goal
that the Chinese government is determined to
realize. With the implementation of large-scale
and effective special poverty-reduction
development programs, the government has
succeeded in reducing the poverty-stricken rural
population, the majority of whom are women, by
53.9 million - from 80 million in 1994 to 26.1
million in 2004.
Formulating preferential policies for the
elimination of poverty among women. The Outline
for the Development of Chinese Women puts forth
the main goals of reducing the extent of poverty
among and the number of poor women, and calls
for more support for poverty-stricken women in
the country's western development strategy, so
that women will be the main receivers of
poverty-reduction resources and the direct
beneficiaries of the achievements of the
poverty-reduction efforts. The state
poverty-reduction program has made it clear that
the government strives to further motivate women
in the poverty-stricken areas to engage in
household sideline production and the "courtyard
economy," launch labor-intensive and other
poverty-reduction projects that are particularly
suitable for women, and organize women to learn
practical skills and enhance their ability to
shake off poverty and become well-off. At the
Global Conference on Speeding Up Poverty
Reduction, held in Shanghai in 2004, the Chinese
government made a statement on its policy
concerning the alleviation and elimination of
poverty, which stressed the principle that, all
factors being equal, preference will be given to
poor women, and encouraged poor women to take
part in poverty-reduction programs, and promised
that the ratio of women participants would be no
less than 40 percent of the total.
Adopting effective measures to gradually
eliminate poverty among women in rural areas.
Since 2001, the Chinese government has made sex
indicator a component of the poverty monitoring
work in rural areas, and stressed that attention
should be paid to gender equality in the
poverty-reduction work. In recent years, the
government has increased its financial input
into poverty-reduction work. In 2004 alone, 12.2
billion yuan was allocated by the central
treasury for poverty reduction projects, and
local governments also increased their inputs
into this field. At the same time, and on the
basis of the specific conditions in different
areas, they have endeavored to help rural women
get rid of poverty by way of provision of
small-sum credit loans, labor export and
pairing-off assistance. During the period from
2001 to 2004, a total of 13.52 billion yuan in
small-sum credit loans for rural households was
granted from the state poverty-reduction
discount loans, and more than half of the money
went to women. Since 2001, the Chinese
government has taken poverty-reduction projects
in the form of participation of the poor as the
main way to "enhance the whole village," and
such projects now cover 148,000 poverty-stricken
villages nationwide.
Supporting and encouraging NGOs to help women
get rid of poverty and become well-off. In
recent years, thanks to the support and
initiative of the Chinese government, women's
federations at all levels have launched, in view
of local conditions, the "Poverty-Reduction
Action for Women" with provision of small-sum
credit loans, poverty elimination group by
group, labor export, pairing-off assistance and
mutual help between the eastern and western
parts of the country as the main contents. The
China Population Welfare Foundation has launched
"Happiness Project" with an aim to help poor
mothers. It raises funds to help poor mothers
participate in economic and social development,
and enhance their health and cultural level. The
project of "Love of the Earth, Water Cellars for
Mothers," initiated by the China Women's
Development Foundation, has raised funds for
building more than 90,000 rain-water collecting
cellars and 1,100 small central water supply
projects in the water-short northwest part of
China, benefiting nearly one million
poverty-stricken people. In addition, women's
federations and other NGOs have tried every
means to get international funds and material
aid to support the poverty-reduction projects
and help women in poverty-stricken areas improve
their lot.
IV. Women's Participation in Decision Making and
Management
Women's ability to be involved in the management
of state and social affairs has been constantly
strengthened, and their ability in handling
political affairs has gradually enhanced.
China's Constitution clearly stipulates the
basic principle that men and women have equal
political rights. The Law on the Protection of
Rights and Interests of Women has made further
stipulations to ensure that women can
participate in decision making and management.
The Outline for the Development of Chinese Women
clearly defines the specific goals to be reached
for women to participate in government work. All
these have laid the legal and policy foundation
for increasing women's participation in
government work.
The people's congress system is a fundamental
political system in China, and the state pays
great attention to the important role played by
women in the people's congresses at all levels.
The Election Law of the National People's
Congress and Local People's Congresses at All
Levels of the People's Republic of China,
promulgated in 1995, stipulates that deputies to
the National People's Congress (NPC) and local
people's congresses at all levels should include
appropriate numbers of women, and the proportion
of women deputies should be increased step by
step. In the past decade, women have displayed
great enthusiasm for participating in electing
deputies to the people's congresses at all
levels and exercising their democratic rights.
Some 73.4 percent of women turned out to elect
deputies to local people's congresses. Of all
the deputies to the various National People's
Congresses, more than 20 percent have been
women. The proportion of women among the
deputies to the Tenth National People's Congress
is 20.2 percent; and women members account for
13.2 percent of all members of the Standing
Committee of the NPC, an increase of 0.5
percentage point over the previous national
congress. Moreover, three of the
vice-chairpersons of the NPC's Standing
Committee are women.
The system of multi-party cooperation and
political consultation under the leadership of
the Communist Party of China (CPC) is a basic
political system in China. The CPC is the ruling
party, while all other political parties are
participants in state affairs. They are allies
working closely with the CPC. Women account for
a certain number of CPC members. In 2004, female
membership in the CPC was 12.956 million,
accounting for 18.6 percent of all CPC members,
an increase of 3 percentage points over 1995.
Women deputies accounted for 18 percent of all
deputies to the 16th CPC National Congress, an
increase of 1.2 percentage points over the
previous congress. Of the members of the 16th
Central Committee of the CPC, 7.6 percent are
women (as either members or alternate members),
an increase of 0.3 of one percentage point over
the previous congress. Female membership is
relatively high in the eight democratic parties,
exceeding 30 percent in seven of them. The
Chinese People's Political Consultative
Conference (CPPCC) is an important organ of the
multi-party cooperation and political
consultation system under the leadership of the
CPC. At present, four of the vice-chairpersons
of the National Committee of the CPPCC are
women. Women members and women Standing
Committee members of the first conference of the
Tenth National Congress of the CPPCC accounted
for 16.7 and 11.7 percent, respectively, up 1.2
percentage points and 1.7 percentage points over
the first conference of the previous congress.
The state has clearly defined the objective for
training and selecting women cadres, and has
strengthened the work of training and selecting
women cadres. As a result, women are now widely
participating in the state and social
administrative work, and a large number of
outstanding women serve as leading cadres at
various levels. By the end of 2004, women cadres
at county (division) or prefecture (department)
level accounted for 16.9 percent and 12.6
percent of all cadres at the corresponding level
in all Party committees, people's congresses,
governments, CPPCC organizations, courts,
procuratorates, democratic parties and mass
organizations across the country, 4.3 percentage
points and 4.5 percentage points higher than in
1995, respectively; 368 incumbent or vice mayors
(commissioners and prefects) were women; and
women cadres at or above the provincial
(ministry) level accounted for 9.9 percent of
the total at that level, an increase of 2.8
percentage points over 1995. At present, China
has one woman vice-premier and one woman state
councilor on the State Council, and 25 women
incumbent or vice ministers or ministerial-level
directors or heads in the Supreme People's
Court, the Supreme People's Procuratorate, and
the ministries and commissions under the State
Council. The proportion of women civil servants
recruited in 2003 nationwide was 27.8 percent of
the total; and that in the organs of the CPC
Central Committee and central government was
37.7 percent. In addition, China also attaches
great importance to the training of women cadres
of ethnic groups, and to strengthening their
ability to participate in state affairs.
The level of participation in state affairs by
women at the grassroots level has also risen
continuously. Women in both rural and urban
areas enthusiastically take part in the
elections of neighborhood committees and village
committees. In 2004, the number of women
neighborhood committee members reached 237,000,
and that of women village committee members
reached 443,000, accounting for 55.8 percent and
15.1 percent of the total members of
neighborhood committees and village committees,
respectively. A large number of women have come
to the fore as chairpersons of neighborhood and
village committees.
The role of women's federations in participating
in and supervising government work has been
strengthened. The channels for women's
democratic participation have been constantly
widened. As the representatives of all China's
women, women's federations at all levels are
involved in formulating and revising laws and
regulations regarding women's rights and
interests. They are also involved in supervising
the enforcement of such laws and regulations.
Relevant government departments earnestly
solicit the comments of women's federations and
make a point of reflecting their opinions in
related policies and plans.
V. Women
and Education
In China, women enjoy the same rights and
opportunities as men to receive education. Such
rights and opportunities are clearly defined in
China's Education Law, Compulsory Education Law
and Vocational Education Law. The state takes
concrete measures and actions to ensure that
girls receive nine-year compulsory education and
that women have more opportunities to receive
secondary and higher education. The state is
determined to eliminate illiteracy among young
and middle-aged women, promote lifelong
education for women and extend their average
years of education.
The Chinese government makes great efforts to
eliminate gender disparities at the stage of
compulsory education, and improve the education
environment for girls. In 2004, the enrollment
of boys and girls was 98.97 percent and 98.93
percent, respectively. The difference in access
to education between boys and girls was reduced
from 0.7 percentage point in 1995 to 0.04
percentage point. The government has unceasingly
increased its input into compulsory education in
the countryside, so as to improve the compulsory
education environment there and ensure that all
girls, like boys, have the chance to receive
compulsory education. In 2004, the educational
appropriation from the state treasury for
compulsory education in rural areas reached
139.362 billion yuan, two times the amount in
1995. In recent years, the state has raised
money from many channels for grants to students
in primary and middle schools. Under one policy
known as "Two Exemptions and One Allowance," the
government provides subsidies so that students
from families with financial difficulties in
rural areas, particularly in central and west
China, are exempt from paying textbook fees and
other fees, and students attending boarding
schools get allowances. Governments at all
levels have formulated special policies and
taken measures concerning the education of girls
in poor areas and areas inhabited by ethnic
minorities, work hard to raise the level of
compulsory education for girls in rural China.
In addition, the state has adopted special
policies to ensure that migrant children
(including girls) from rural areas receive
compulsory education. For many years,
governments at all levels have worked hard to
help NGOs in organizing donation activities to
pool money to improve the education of girls.
The Hope Project and the Spring Buds Program
initiated by the China Youth Development
Foundation and the China Children's Foundation
have provided financial assistance to large
numbers of girl dropouts to help them return to
school.
The state exerts great efforts to ensure that
women have the opportunity to receive secondary
and higher education. As a result, the
proportion of women in all types of schools at
all levels has increased considerably. In 2004,
the proportion of girl students in junior and
senior middle schools reached 47.4 percent and
45.8 percent, respectively; the proportion of
girl students in secondary vocational schools
reached 51.5 percent; the number of girl
students in institutions of higher learning
nationwide reached 6,090,000, accounting for
45.7 percent of all students in such schools and
an increase of 10.3 percentage points over 1995.
The proportion of female postgraduate and
doctoral students was 44.2 percent and 31.4
percent, 13.6 percentage points and 15.9
percentage points higher respectively over the
figures for 1995. In recent years, the Chinese
government has introduced the state loan system
and established state scholarships for students
at institutions of higher learning, providing
loans at discounted interest, scholarship and
stipends to poor students (including girls) to
help them complete their studies. Meanwhile, the
government encourages enterprises, private
institutions and individuals to donate to
education and to help female students with
financial difficulties receive education. The
state attaches importance to the fostering and
training of women teachers, and gives full play
to their role in promoting women's education. In
2004, the proportions of women teachers in
junior and senior middle schools were 45.9
percent and 41.7 percent, respectively; and the
proportions of full-time women teachers in
secondary vocational schools and institutions of
higher learning was 46.5 percent and 42.5
percent, respectively.
For many years, the Chinese government has paid
great attention to eliminating illiteracy among
women, curbing emergence of new women
illiterates, and preventing women from becoming
illiterates again. Its policy priority in this
respect is to promote illiteracy-elimination
education for women in poor areas and areas
inhabited by ethnic minorities. Relevant
government departments and the All-China Women's
Federation have jointly launched the
Illiteracy-elimination Program among Women. In
2004, the illiteracy rate among women 15 years
of age and above in urban areas was 8.2 percent,
a decrease of 5.7 percentage points from that of
1995; the illiteracy rate among women 15 years
of age and above in rural areas was 16.9
percent, a decrease of 10.5 percentage points
from that of 1995. The illiteracy rate among
young and middle-aged women across the country
was 4.2 percent, a drop of 5.2 percentage points
from that of 1995, and the rate of decrease is
higher than the rate of decrease of illiteracy
among the general population.
The state has made energetic endeavors to
develop vocational education, adult education
and technical education, the level of lifelong
education of women has been raised and the gap
between the genders narrowed. According to the
fifth national census, conducted in 2000, the
average number of years of education of Chinese
women was seven - one and a half years more than
in 1990 - and the gap between the genders had
been narrowed by half a year in that decade. In
2004 alone, the number of women studying at
correspondence and night schools and other
higher learning institutions for adults stood at
2.09 million, 50 percent of the total number of
students of such educational institutions.
In recent years the state has intensified
efforts to train women in vocational skills. By
adopting various training methods, the state
aims to help women in urban areas enhance their
competitive abilities, to help women in rural
areas get better harvests and become well-off,
and to help migrant workers (including women)
become better qualified for the labor market.
VI. Women and
Health
The Chinese government considers women's health
an area of priority in promoting gender equality
and the development of women. Over the past
decade, the state has promulgated and
implemented such statutes as the Law of the
People's Republic of China on Health Protection
of Mothers and Infants and Law of the People's
Republic of China on Population and Family
Planning. It has also set the goals for women's
health in the Outline for the Development of
Chinese Women. The state has continuously
increased its monetary input to improve the
health of women and infants. It has gradually
improved the women's healthcare service network.
By the end of 2004, there were 2,997 healthcare
institutes for women and children throughout
China, with 243,000 beds for women.
Paying great attention to satisfying women's
demands for healthcare service at all periods of
their life, and extending women's life
expectancy. For years, the healthcare
departments at all levels have considered the
examination and treatment of gynecological
diseases routine work. Every year, over one
third of married women under the age of 65
across China go through examinations for
gynecological diseases. In 2004, some 37.3
percent of them had this examination. The
government also pays attention to the health of
teenagers and elderly women. It has launched
educational campaigns in schools and
neighborhood communities on knowledge about sex
and the prevention of AIDS, so as to raise
female teenagers' awareness of the importance of
a healthy sex life and strengthen their
self-protection ability. Scientific healthcare
methods are disseminated through many channels,
and more and more special outpatient services
are available for elderly women, providing
consultancy on healthcare and related services.
As a result, the quality of life of elderly
women has improved markedly. The average life
expectancy for women was 74 years in 2003.
Lowering the mortality rate of women in
pregnancy and childbirth to ensure the safety of
the mother. In the 2000-2001 period, the state
invested 200 million yuan in a project intended
to "lower the mortality rate of women in
pregnancy and childbirth and eliminate tetanus
among the newborn," which covered 378
state-level poor counties. From 2002 to 2005,
the central treasury and relevant local areas
allocated an additional 400 million yuan for the
continuation of this project, extending it to
1,000 counties and benefiting more than 300
million people. Over the past few years,
hundreds of thousands of poor women have
delivered children safely thanks to the support
of this project. In addition, the Chinese
government has made efforts to improve child
delivery conditions in clinics in townships
(towns). By taking measures such as opening
emergency green channels for women in childbirth
and giving financial support to poor women in
childbirth, it has increased the number of women
in the countryside who go to hospital to give
birth, thereby increasing the safety of the
mothers. In the past decade, the mortality rate
of women in childbirth has declined steadily -
from 61.9 per 100,000 in 1995 to 48.3 per
100,000 in 2004.
Actively promoting high-quality family planning
services in line with the people-first principle
to guarantee women's right to family planning.
In 1995, out of consideration for women's
reproductive health, the Chinese government
launched the project of providing high-quality
family planning services in line with the
people-first principle. Centered on the demands
of women of childbearing age, it informs women
of their choices in terms of contraceptive
methods, and encourages men to get involved in
reproductive health activities. In addition, it
gives adolescent girls consultancy on
reproductive health. Over the past decade, this
project has been promoted in more than 800
counties (cities, districts) all over China,
satisfying the demand of women for family
planning services and safeguarding their rights
in this respect.
Making every effort to provide healthcare
services to migrant women. As the population of
migrants moving between rural and urban areas
keeps increasing, the state, by following the
principle of equal treatment, appropriate
guidance, better management and quality
services, has made great efforts to provide
migrant women with the same family planning
preferential policies and technical services as
enjoyed by women with permanent residence. The
Outline for the Development of Chinese Women
emphasizes that the healthcare of pregnant women
and women in childbirth among the migrant
population should be included in the healthcare
services for such women in the places they
migrate to. The relevant government departments
at all levels are exploring a special mode of
healthcare service for migrant women in the
neighborhood communities. Using a variety of
channels, they provide education and consultancy
on healthy sex and reproduction. They organize
migrant women to have medical checkups,
distribute contraceptive devices to them free of
charge and give free services to poor migrant
women in childbirth. These measures have
improved the health of migrant women
substantially.
Strengthening the prevention and treatment of
HIV/AIDS, showing special concern for women in
this regard. In recent years, the state has paid
great attention to the prevention and treatment
of AIDS, set up the State Council Work Committee
on the Prevention and Treatment of AIDS, and
earmarked extra funds for this purpose. As a
result, practical effects have been achieved in
the prevention and treatment of AIDS. Faced with
the trend of more and more women being infected
with HIV/AIDS, the state considers the
prevention of the spread of AIDS from mother to
baby an important part of the healthcare work
for women and children. In order to find an
intervention mode and experience suited to
China's conditions, a team made up of
specialists has been created to do pilot work
regarding the prevention of AIDS, stemming the
spread of AIDS from mother to baby free of
charge, showing special concern for pregnant
women tested HIV positive and their babies.
Relevant government departments have launched
campaigns to educate the public about the
prevention and treatment of AIDS, and provide
relevant services, promote the use of condoms,
and get more men involved in AIDS prevention so
as to reduce the number of women infected. On
World AIDS Day in 2004, activities were launched
throughout China under the theme "Show Concern
for Women, Say No to AIDS."
Encouraging NGOs to launch various activities to
promote women's healthcare and widely carry out
international cooperation. One of the many
programs launched by the All-China Women's
Federation is known as "Health Express for
Mother," in which face-to-face publicity and
educational activities under the theme "Stay
away from AIDS to Benefit the Whole Family" were
organized in 51 areas for the prevention and
treatment of AIDS in a comprehensive way. The
Family Planning Association of China has
launched programs in which children and young
people teach each other knowledge about the
prevention of venereal diseases and AIDS in
universities and middle schools, and among
migrant teenagers. In the countryside, the
association combines efforts to help women
increase their income with healthcare for women
and children, as well as family planning,
effectively improving women's health conditions.
In recent years, the Chinese government has
conducted international cooperation with many
international organizations, including the
United Nations Fund for Population Activities,
United Nations Children Fund, United Nations
Development Fund for Women, World Bank, World
Health Organization, and Joint United Nations
Program on HIV/AIDS, in the fields of hygiene
for women and children, reproductive health,
family planning, and the prevention and
treatment of AIDS. This cooperation has produced
good results. More than one third of the capital
for programs to assist China under the
management and coordination of the Ministry of
Commerce is used to support healthcare services
for women and children.
VII. Women, Marriage and the Family
In the early 1950s, the Marriage Law of the
People's Republic of China, the first law
promulgated since the founding of New China in
1949, clearly stipulated women's equal status in
marriage and the family. The revised Marriage
Law, promulgated in 2001, reiterated the basic
principle of equality between men and women,
stressed the equal status of husband and wife
and their equal rights and responsibilities in
marriage and the family, and, in consideration
of actual situation, added articles forbidding
domestic violence and bigamy with the clear aim
of protecting women's rights. Today, women have
a lot more say in decision-making concerning
their own marriage and play a bigger role in
family decisions, and their personal and
property rights are better protected.
Adhering to the basic national policy of family
planning and advocating late marriage and late
childbirth. Over the last decade, the rate of
early marriage among women has dropped, the
average age for first marriage has gone up, and
the general childbirth rate was kept at a fairly
low level - 1.8 per couple in 2004. In the
course of promoting family planning, the state
stresses gender consciousness in society while
respecting women's rights concerning childbirth,
integrating family planning with the promotion
of gender equality. The Law on Population and
Family Planning, implemented since 2002, further
stipulates that husband and wife must both be
responsible for family planning, thus providing
favorable conditions for gender equality in
family life.
Greatly developing social welfare undertakings,
giving priority to community public services
that directly concern family life with the aim
of socializing housework, and enabling women to
have more free time. In tandem with the rapid
development of housework services, the rate of
expenditure on such services is increasing. The
prevalence of household appliances and the
development of nurseries and kindergartens, as
well as the increased percentage of housework
shared by men have all lightened women's
housework burden and further narrowed the gap in
housework time between men and women.
Protecting girls' and baby girls' legal rights
to subsistence and development and cutting down
the disparity in number between baby boys and
girls. The Law on Population and Family Planning
forbids fetus gender identification by means of
ultrasonic and other technical methods for
non-medical purposes, and forbids termination of
pregnancy out of consideration for a fetus'
gender for non-medical purposes. In recent
years, government departments concerned have
initiated the drive to "Bringing a New Ethos of
Marriage and Childbirth to Myriads of
Households," to further stress equality between
men and women and promote social esteem for both
male and female babies. In 2003, the
"Care-for-Girl Action" started, which put
forward the ideas that "gender discrimination
should be eradicated from the prenatal stage and
gender equality should be stressed in early
childhood." Through wide and intensive
publicity, the action is aimed at establishing,
step by step, an interest-oriented mechanism
favorable for girls and their family
development, changing the traditional preference
for boys to girls, safeguarding girls'
legitimate rights and interests, and striving to
enhance their status in the family.
Paying due attention to protecting elderly
women's legitimate rights and interests, and
raising their status in marriage and the family.
To provide legal and institutional guarantees
for the protection of the rights and interests
of elderly people of whom women form the
majority, the state has formulated a series of
laws and policies over the last decade, with the
Law of the People's Republic of China on the
Protection of Rights and Interests of the Aged
as the core. The Chinese government is
especially concerned about the special problems
of elderly women, and provides guarantees for
their basic subsistence and protection of their
legitimate rights and interests. The state also
encourages the development of undertakings and
industries aimed at serving elderly people, and
gradually achieving the goal of offering
socialized services for the aged. It also pays
attention to ensuring the physical and mental
health of elderly women, and enriching their
spiritual and cultural life.
Striving to create a household environment
featuring respect for women and gender equality.
In September 2001, the state promulgated the
Implementation Outline for the Project for
Enhancing the Moral Standards of Chinese
Citizens, which sets forth the ideas of
achieving equality between men and women in
family life, respecting and protecting women's
legitimate rights and interests, and opposing
discrimination against and persecution of women.
The outline also advocates making one's own
decision in love and marriage, and promoting the
new civilized ethos of "respect for the elderly
and care for the young, equality between men and
women, industrious and thrifty household
management, and harmonious family life and
neighborly unity." With great support from the
government, a sound environment for gender
equality in household affairs is taking shape.
Actively promoting international exchanges and
cooperation in the aspect of families. The
Chinese government has all along actively
participated in UN resolutions, consultations
and other activities concerning family issues.
China joined the World Family Organization in
2001 and attended the United Nations Doha
International Conference on the Family in 2004.
China supports the Doha Declaration in its
encouragement of equal partnership between
husband and wife within a committed marital
relationship, and condemns domestic violence. In
the same year, China hosted the World Family
Summit, and advocated that gender equality
should begin in the family, to foster a
harmonious partnership among family members.
VIII. Women and the Environment
The Chinese government has continuously tried to
optimize women's living and development
environment, to bring their role into full play
in protecting and improving the environment, and
to enable women to live and develop in a sound
environment.
Formulating a strategic goal for women to
participate in sustainable development. In
accordance with China's Agenda 21 and the
requirement for reaching the goal of the Outline
for the Development of Chinese Women,
governments at all levels have actively
encouraged women's participation in scientific
research, evaluation, planning, designing,
supervision and management of the environment.
At present, quite a number of women are serving
in departments related to environmental
protection at various levels, some even taking
leading positions, with about 30 percent of
environmental monitoring and law-enforcement
officials in the country being female. The state
encourages women to take an active part in
non-governmentally organized environmental
protection activities. With the support of the
government, the All-China Women's Federation has
waged social mobilization and publicity
campaigns, such as the March 8 Green Project,
which involves over 100 million women volunteers
a year in tree planting, shelterbelt
construction and small drainage area control. In
1999, the All-China Women's Federation won the
Global 500 Award of the United Nations
Environment Program. In addition, some
environmental protection NGOs initiated and
participated in by women have urged enterprises
to assume more social responsibilities, promoted
green production and lifestyle, and played an
active role in training and mobilizing the
public to participate in environmental
protection.
Protecting and improving the natural and living
conditions for women's subsistence and
development. In the past decade, with marked
improvement in living conditions for both urban
and rural residents, the average housing space
and greenbelt area per person have increased by
a large margin. The building and opening of many
cultural, sport and recreational facilities has
resulted in more public space for women and
created favorable conditions for them to improve
their quality of life. In recent years, the
government has made great efforts to upgrade
public toilets and water sewage treatment, and
raise the rate of use of tap water and sanitary
toilets in rural areas. From 2001 to 2004, the
central government earmarked 9.7 billion yuan to
solve the problem of drinking water for rural
residents, providing safe drinking water for an
average of 6.9 million rural women a year. In
2004, as many as 53.1 percent of rural
households in China had access to sanitary
toilets. The sanitary disposal rate of night
soil in rural areas rose quickly from 28.5
percent in 1998 to 57.5 percent in 2004. The
upgrading of public toilets and sewage
facilities has eased the heavy burden of many
rural women to carry water, and reduced health
hazards for them and their family members, thus
effectively improving their living and
development conditions.
Actively creating a social environment conducive
to gender equality and women's development, and
gradually eliminating social prejudice,
discrimination and suppression of women. The
state has strengthened its publicity work
concerning the basic national policy of gender
equality. Officials in charge of government
departments concerned and leaders of provinces
(autonomous regions and municipalities directly
under the central government) have published
articles in the central and local mass media to
expound the importance of gender equality for
social development, and confirm women's role and
contributions to the economy and all social
sectors. A large number of programs and reports
promoting gender equality and women's rights and
interests, and showing women's talents, have
been published, shown and broadcast in
newspapers and on TV and radio programs.
Besides, the government supports women's
organizations to cooperate with the mass media
in running programs to demonstrate women's
functions in and contributions to social and
economic development, and encourages them to use
and attain access to information resources. With
the wide application of the Internet in China,
many women organizations have created their own
websites, which have become an important means
to publicize the idea of gender equality and
promote women's development.
IX. Legal Guarantees of Women's Rights and
Interests
The state's legal system for protecting women's
legitimate rights and interests has been
improved constantly. In the last decade, China
has enacted and revised, in succession, the
Marriage Law, the Population and Family Planning
Law, the Law on Rural Land Contracting, and the
Law on Protection of Rights and Interests of
Women, and promulgated and implemented over 100
rules and regulations concerning the protection
of women's rights and interests, such as the
Regulations on Implementing the Law on Mother
and Infant Healthcare.
Gradually setting up a socialized work mechanism
for protecting women's rights and interests. The
state has established a national coordination
group for the protection of women's and
children's rights and interests, composed of
members from 19 government departments. Some
courts have established specialized tribunals to
accept and adjudicate civil cases involving the
protection of women's rights and interests, and
people's jurors from women's federations and
other relevant organs are invited by the courts
to participate directly in the hearing of such
cases. The state has made positive efforts to
cultivate gender awareness among law enforcement
and judicial officials, bringing into full play
judicial officials' role in safeguarding women's
rights. The state also sets store by increasing
the number of female judicial officials and
their ratio in the total number. In 2004, female
judges and procurators accounted for 22.7
percent and 21.7 percent of the total numbers,
up 5.9 percentage points and 5 percentage
points, respectively, as compared with 1995.
Holding legal aid and publicity activities
concerning the legal system for safeguarding
women's leg itimate rights and interests. To
ensure that women's legitimate rights and
interests are properly protected, the relevant
department of the Chinese government issued a
special notice, stressing that no legal aid
institutions, law firms, notarization
institutions or grassroots legal service
institutions may decline to handle or postpone
without proper reason an accusation, appeal or
prosecution that involves infringement on
women's rights and interests. Moreover, legal
service fees should be reduced or exempted for
women in straitened circumstances. The
Regulations on Legal Aid, put into effect in
China in 2003, expressly stipulates that it is
the government's responsibility to provide legal
aid, and citizens in straitened circumstances
can obtain legal aid free of charge, which
therefore provides material aid to impoverished
women against infringement of their rights. By
the end of 2004, 3,023 governmental legal aid
institutions had been established in China. In
addition, the Chinese government also supports
NGOs' efforts to set up hotlines to protect
women's rights and legal consultation centers to
provide legal aid and similar services for
women. China is now engaged in its fourth
five-year publicity campaign. Highlighted in the
publicity activities are the Law on Protection
of Rights and Interests of Women, the Labor Law,
the Marriage Law, the Population and Family
Planning Law, and the Law on Rural Land
Contracting, all of which are closely related to
women's rights and interests.
Combating domestic violence against women and
taking practical measures to solve the problem.
The Criminal Law, the Criminal Procedure Law,
the General Rules of the Civil Law, the Marriage
Law, and the Law on Protection of Rights and
Interests of Women all forbid violence against
women by anyone and in any form. Legislation and
judicial practice both stress that those who
have committed domestic violence against women
shall be penalized in civil and criminal terms
according to the seriousness of the violence,
and active legal aids should be provided to the
victims. In recent years, local statutes
outlawing domestic violence have been enacted in
some areas, and by the end of 2004 some 22
provinces (autonomous regions, municipalities
directly under the central government) had
formulated such rules, policies and measures.
Besides, the Chinese government has cooperated
actively with NGOs to launch intervening
projects, as well as vigorous publicity,
education and training activities; set up alarm
centers, injury assessment centers and women's
aid stations; open anti-domestic-violence
hotlines; and provide multiple services for
female victims, including consultation, shelter,
medical care and psychological help.
Stringently cracking down on crimes of abducting
and trafficking in women. The charges for
abduction, trafficking in and buying women were
revised and added to the Criminal Law in 1997,
and the penalties for such crimes were made more
severe. The Supreme People's Court has laid down
judicial interpretations on the related legal
clauses to facilitate their execution. In recent
years, public security organs throughout the
country have taken a series of special actions
to crack down on the abducting of and
trafficking in women and children, set up
transfer, training and rehabilitating centers
for rescued women and children. All these
actions have achieved remarkable results.
Meanwhile, the public security and judicial
organs have made the crackdown on the crimes of
abducting and trafficking in women and children
an important field of international cooperation,
and have signed agreements on bilateral police
service cooperation and treaties on judicial
assistance in criminal cases with related
countries in joint undertakings to prevent and
crack down on crimes of abducting and
trafficking in women and children.
Protecting the legal rights of female criminals
and criminal suspects. The state strictly
observes the system of separate jails and
management for male and female criminals, with
female criminals directly managed by
policewomen. Women doctors are assigned to
female criminals, and the latter are allowed to
spend festivals with their minor children.
Education in law, culture and vocations suitable
for female criminals' physiology and psychology,
and a rich variety of cultural and sport
activities are conducted to help their
rehabilitation.
Conclusion
It is obvious to all that great progress has
been achieved in the promotion of gender
equality and women's development in China over
the past decade.
At the same time, the Chinese government is
highly aware that, restricted by the country's
limited level of economic and social
development, especially in the process of
economic restructuring and in establishing and
improving a socialist market economic system,
China is confronted with new situations and
problems in its efforts to promote gender
equality and women's development. Chinese women
have become increasingly more diversified in
their social status, and thus their needs for
subsistence, development and protection of their
rights and interests also vary. There is an
obvious imbalance in the development of women in
different regions, social status and groups; the
outmoded conventions and custom of inequality
between men and women handed down from China's
history and culture have not yet been completely
eradicated, and women's rights and interests are
still being infringed upon to varying degrees in
some areas. There is a long way to go and
arduous tasks to tackle to achieve gender
equality and promote women's development in
China to a satisfactory level.
In the new historical stage of building a
comparatively well-off society in an all-round
way, the Chinese government aims, from the
strategic height of building a harmonious
socialist society in the light of China's
national conditions, to promote the scientific
concept of people-oriented, overall, coordinated
and sustainable development, further implement
the basic national policy of equality between
men and women, safeguard women's rights and
interests according to law, put into effect the
requirements for the goals of the Outline for
the Development of Chinese Women, and strive to
ensure that women enjoy the same rights as men
in politics, economy, culture, society and
family life. The Chinese government will
continue its efforts to encourage all social
sectors to help promote gender equality and
women's development, strengthen its exchanges
and cooperation with the United Nations and
other international organizations concerned and
the governments of various countries, and make
active contributions to promoting worldwide
equality, development and peace.
[Source: Xinhua News Agency]
© 2005 China AIDS Survey Monterey, California
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