Hostname: page-component-cd9895bd7-jkksz Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-12-22T16:42:19.989Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Gender Statistics and Local Governance in China: State Feminist versus Feminist Political Economy Approaches*

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  29 January 2016

Lanyan Chen*
Affiliation:
Nipissing University, Canada. Email: [email protected].

Abstract

Gender statistics provide an essential tool to mainstream gender equality in policymaking through the recognition by government and the public of gender differences in all walks of life. One legacy of feminist movements since the 1990s has been a focus on the challenges women face to effect substantive equality with men. Based on the findings of a project carried out in three districts of Tianjin, this paper identifies a lack of gender statistics in China's statistical system and the resulting negative impacts on local policymaking. The findings point to weaknesses in the Chinese “state feminist” approach to gender statistics, mostly at the level of the central government. From a feminist political economy perspective, the paper argues, policymaking in China is a process built upon centralized statistical reporting systems that serve the senior governments more than local communities. Gender statistics have the potential to enhance local governance in China when policymaking becomes a site of contestation where community activists demand the use of statistics to assist policies that promote equality.

摘要

性别统计能使政府和大众对各行各界所存在的性别差异得到认识, 并据此成为决策过程中性别平等主流化的一个基本工具。 女权运动自上世纪九十年代以来的一个持久重心是面对要跟男性一起实现实质性平等的种种挑战。本文就天津三个区的一个研究项目的发现表明在中国统计制度中性别统计的缺失以及其对地方决策所造成的负面影响。该项目的发现也指出了 “国家女权主义” 在中国过于集中于中央政府的性别统计的缺陷。本文从女权主义政治经济的角度分析了中国决策过程所建立的统一报表的统计制度是为上级政府而不是为地方社区服务。进而, 只有当决策成为社区活动家要求使用统计来推动有利于平等政策而力争的地域时, 性别统计才将在中国发挥出其提高地方治理的潜力。

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © The China Quarterly 2016 

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

Footnotes

*

The author acknowledges the useful comments made by two anonymous reviewers and by Timothy Pearson and Peter Forster, and valuable efforts by Chen Shumei, Wang Xiangxian, Zhang Xiyang, Wang Xiangxia, Du Fangqin, Meng Xianying, Ren Jie, Tan Lin and many others, whose contributions helped to make the Tianjin Project a published reality.

References

Bezanson, Kate, and Luxton, Meg. 2006. Social Reproduction. Montreal: McGill-Queen's University Press.Google Scholar
Cai, Lihui. 2008. “Mingxi zhineng: lishun quanli zongheng guanxi de guanjian” (Clarifying functions: key to rationalizing intersectional power relations). Xueshu yanjiu 2, 710.Google Scholar
Cao, Wenmin. 2008. Zhengfu zhineng lun (On Government Functions). Beijing: People's Publishing House.Google Scholar
Chen, Lanyan. 2008. Gender and Chinese Development: Towards an Equitable Society. New York: Routledge.Google Scholar
Chen, Lanyan. 2015. “From state capitalism to women's activism: the implications of Chinese economic reform for women and the evolution of feminist organizing.” In Baksh, Rawwida and Harcourt, Wendy (eds.), Oxford Handbook on Transnational Feminist Movements. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 578606.Google Scholar
Chen, Lanyan, Chen, Shumei and Wang, Xiangmei. 2011. Xingbie tongji yu Zhongguo de hexie fazhan (Gender Statistics and China's Harmonious Development). Tianjin: People's Publishing House.Google Scholar
Cohen, Marjorie Griffith, and Pulkingham, Jane. 2009. Public Policy for Women: The State, Income Security, and Labour Market Issues. Toronto: University of Toronto Press.Google Scholar
Elson, Diane. 1991. Male Bias in the Development Process. Manchester: Manchester University Press.Google Scholar
Gu, Baochang. 1998. Zonglun Zhongguo rengou taishi: yu shijian de duihua (China's Population Development Situation: Dialogue with Practice). Shanghai: The Publishing House of the Shanghai Academy of Social Sciences.Google Scholar
Judd, Ellen. 2002. The Chinese Women's Movement between State and Market. Stanford: Stanford University Press.Google Scholar
Lin, Zhibin. 2002. Xingbie yu fazhan jiaocheng (Gender and Development Curriculum). Beijing: China Agricultural University Press.Google Scholar
Luo, Xiaoge. 2009. Nüxing xue (Women's Studies). Changsha: Hunan University Press.Google Scholar
Marshall, T.H., and Bottomore, Tom. 1992. Citizenship and Social Class. London: Pluto Press Classic.Google Scholar
NBS. 2012. Women and Men in China: Facts and Figures 2012. Beijing: China Statistics Press.Google Scholar
NBS. 2013. Statistical Communiqué of the People's Republic of China on 2012 National Economic and Social Development, http://www.stats.gov.cn/english/StatisticalCommuniqu/201302/t20130222_61455.html. Accessed 18 May 2014.Google Scholar
PRC (People's Republic of China). 2002. Population and Family Planning Law of the People's Republic of China, http://english.gov.cn/laws/2005-10/11/content_75954.htm. Accessed 4 February 2014.Google Scholar
PRC. 2005. Law of the People's Republic of China on the Protection of Women's Rights and Interests (amended 2005), http://www.women.org.cn/zcfg/fnqybzf/index.shtml. Accessed 5 March 2012.Google Scholar
PRC. 2011. Programme for the Development of Chinese Women, 1995–2000; 2001–2010; 2011–2020, www.women.org.cn. Accessed 22 May 2014.Google Scholar
PRC. 2013. Statistics Law of the People's Republic of China, www.stats.gov.cn. Accessed April 2013.Google Scholar
PRC. 2014. “Detailed rules for the implementation of Statistics Law of People's Republic of China,” www.stats.gov.cn. Accessed 21 May 2014.Google Scholar
Stetson, Dorothy McBridge, and Mazur, Amy G. (eds.). 1995. Comparative State Feminism. London: Sage Publications.Google Scholar
UNECE (United Nations Economic Commission for Europe). 2010. Developing Gender Statistics: A Practical Tool. Geneva: United Nations.Google Scholar
UNFPA (United Nations Population Fund). 2015. “UNFPA country programme evaluation: China. Final evaluation report,” http://web2.unfpa.org/public/about/oversight/evaluations/documentList.unfpa.Google Scholar
Women's Research Institute of China. 2011. “Report on the 3rd National Survey on the Status of Chinese Women,” http://www.wsic.ac.cn/academicnews/78621.htm; in English at: http://en.wsic.ac.cn/baike/223.htm. Accessed 2 March 2013.Google Scholar
Working Committee on Women and Children under the State Council. 2005. “Report of the study of strategy to establish and improve the system of gender statistics with Chinese characteristics,” http://www.nwccw.gov.cn/html/03/n-139503.html. Accessed 29 May 2014.Google Scholar