Marriage and family remain a universal and eternal subject of study. It covers law, ethics, sociology, psychology and even economics. Law and ethics play the most outstanding role in it. Family ethics and moral standa...Marriage and family remain a universal and eternal subject of study. It covers law, ethics, sociology, psychology and even economics. Law and ethics play the most outstanding role in it. Family ethics and moral standards constitute an important part of social ethical system while marriage and family constitute part of the legal system nearest to the life of the common people. Since the founding of New China, the Party and the State have paid full attention to the marriage and family system. Compared with other laws, the law about marriage and family was the first to be legislated. On May 1, 1950, New China’s first law, the 1950 version of Marriage Law, was promulgated. Commenting on the legal document, Chairman Mao Zedong had this to say: Marriage law concerns展开更多
The Supreme People’s Court of China recently made public the latest interpretation on applying the Marriage Law, which is meant to provide a judicial basis for courts.The interpretation consists of 19 new itemsand is...The Supreme People’s Court of China recently made public the latest interpretation on applying the Marriage Law, which is meant to provide a judicial basis for courts.The interpretation consists of 19 new itemsand is valid from August 13 this year.展开更多
A 1990 population census revealed that China has 276,912,000 households. As a result of multiplication by smaller families, they are like a well-branched tree, or a river which grows as it collects brooks along its wa...A 1990 population census revealed that China has 276,912,000 households. As a result of multiplication by smaller families, they are like a well-branched tree, or a river which grows as it collects brooks along its way. There is no end to the stories that have been told about families and marriages.展开更多
IN this issue of Women of China we will introduce readers to the Marriage Law of the People’s Republic of China. The Marriage Law of the People’s Republic of China was adopted at the Third Session of the Fifth Natio...IN this issue of Women of China we will introduce readers to the Marriage Law of the People’s Republic of China. The Marriage Law of the People’s Republic of China was adopted at the Third Session of the Fifth National People’s Congress and promulgated on September 10, 1980.展开更多
"LAW" has been drawing closer to the lives ofordinary Chinese people since the 1980s. Overthe past 10 years or so China has issued manylaws in rapid succession. "Governing the statebased on law" wa..."LAW" has been drawing closer to the lives ofordinary Chinese people since the 1980s. Overthe past 10 years or so China has issued manylaws in rapid succession. "Governing the statebased on law" was put into the Constitution of thePRC in March 1999, laying a solid foundation forthe realization of the nation’s four modernizations. I became a lawyer in 1985. Since becoming astaff member of the All-China Women’sFederation (ACWF), I have consulted on theMarriage Law and other regulations and clausesrelated to it.展开更多
The Marriage Law of the People’s Republic of China was adopted at the Third Session of the Fifth National People’s Congress and promulgated by Order No. 9 of the Chairman of the Standing Committee of the Nation-
This article proposes the concept of policy blending to improve our understanding of the densely interactive quality of political initiatives in early 1950s China. Using three cases studies, I argue that policy blendi...This article proposes the concept of policy blending to improve our understanding of the densely interactive quality of political initiatives in early 1950s China. Using three cases studies, I argue that policy blending, defined as the process by which previous political experiences shaped the implementation and interpretation of those subsequent to them (sometimes in ways contrary to the government's intentions), occurred frequently during this period, to the extent that people's understanding of the first years of Chinese Communist Party rule cannot be separated from this phenomenon. Using examples from marriage registration, the Marriage Law and the national discussion of the 1954 draft Constitution, I advance the historiographical argument that the early 1950s should not be demarcated by, or taught mainly with reference to, "temporally encapsulated" policies with clear beginnings and ends (i.e., policy "a" occurred in year "b," followed by policy "c" in year "d"). Rather, policies seeped into each other, producing a blurry--but sometimes accurate--"impression" of state power. I further suggest that the concept of policy blending can be helpful in understanding subsequent political initiatives as well.展开更多
文摘Marriage and family remain a universal and eternal subject of study. It covers law, ethics, sociology, psychology and even economics. Law and ethics play the most outstanding role in it. Family ethics and moral standards constitute an important part of social ethical system while marriage and family constitute part of the legal system nearest to the life of the common people. Since the founding of New China, the Party and the State have paid full attention to the marriage and family system. Compared with other laws, the law about marriage and family was the first to be legislated. On May 1, 1950, New China’s first law, the 1950 version of Marriage Law, was promulgated. Commenting on the legal document, Chairman Mao Zedong had this to say: Marriage law concerns
文摘The Supreme People’s Court of China recently made public the latest interpretation on applying the Marriage Law, which is meant to provide a judicial basis for courts.The interpretation consists of 19 new itemsand is valid from August 13 this year.
文摘A 1990 population census revealed that China has 276,912,000 households. As a result of multiplication by smaller families, they are like a well-branched tree, or a river which grows as it collects brooks along its way. There is no end to the stories that have been told about families and marriages.
文摘IN this issue of Women of China we will introduce readers to the Marriage Law of the People’s Republic of China. The Marriage Law of the People’s Republic of China was adopted at the Third Session of the Fifth National People’s Congress and promulgated on September 10, 1980.
文摘"LAW" has been drawing closer to the lives ofordinary Chinese people since the 1980s. Overthe past 10 years or so China has issued manylaws in rapid succession. "Governing the statebased on law" was put into the Constitution of thePRC in March 1999, laying a solid foundation forthe realization of the nation’s four modernizations. I became a lawyer in 1985. Since becoming astaff member of the All-China Women’sFederation (ACWF), I have consulted on theMarriage Law and other regulations and clausesrelated to it.
文摘The Marriage Law of the People’s Republic of China was adopted at the Third Session of the Fifth National People’s Congress and promulgated by Order No. 9 of the Chairman of the Standing Committee of the Nation-
文摘This article proposes the concept of policy blending to improve our understanding of the densely interactive quality of political initiatives in early 1950s China. Using three cases studies, I argue that policy blending, defined as the process by which previous political experiences shaped the implementation and interpretation of those subsequent to them (sometimes in ways contrary to the government's intentions), occurred frequently during this period, to the extent that people's understanding of the first years of Chinese Communist Party rule cannot be separated from this phenomenon. Using examples from marriage registration, the Marriage Law and the national discussion of the 1954 draft Constitution, I advance the historiographical argument that the early 1950s should not be demarcated by, or taught mainly with reference to, "temporally encapsulated" policies with clear beginnings and ends (i.e., policy "a" occurred in year "b," followed by policy "c" in year "d"). Rather, policies seeped into each other, producing a blurry--but sometimes accurate--"impression" of state power. I further suggest that the concept of policy blending can be helpful in understanding subsequent political initiatives as well.