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One Child

The Story of China's Most Radical Experiment

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Wait time: About 2 weeks
0 of 1 copy available
Wait time: About 2 weeks

A Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist offers an intimate investigation of China’s one-child policy and its consequences for families and the nation at large.

For over three decades, China exercised unprecedented control over the reproductive habits of its billion citizens. Now, with its economy faltering just as it seemed poised to become the largest in the world, the Chinese government has brought an end to its one-child policy. It may once have seemed a shortcut to riches, but it has had a profound effect on society in modern China.
Combining personal portraits of families affected by the policy with a nuanced account of China’s descent towards economic and societal turmoil, Mei Fong reveals the true cost of this controversial policy. Drawing on eight years of research, Fong reveals a dystopian legacy of second children refused documentation by the state; only children supporting their parents and grandparents; and villages filled with ineligible bachelors. 

A “vivid and thoroughly researched” piece of on-the-ground journalism, One Child humanizes the policy that defined China and warns that the ill-effects of its legacy will be felt across the globe (The Guardian, UK).
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    • Library Journal

      January 1, 2016

      This timely investigative report, researched and written (excepting a minor update, not seen at time of review) before the recent dismantling of China's infamous one-child policy, clearly predicts its demise. Malaysian-born Chinese journalist Fong writes a compassionate account of a chilling social experiment of staggering impact. The Chinese Communist Party's quota on children was implemented to address poverty and enable economic growth, but its repercussions are profound. The 35-year practice has brought a severe, chronic baby shortage to the world's most populous country, along with a shortage of women, a great and growing disproportion of elderly people, and generations of children raised in a quirky social environment, subject to both great coddling and scarily lofty expectations. Coerced abortions and sterilizations, situations of baby trafficking, and other horrors have been perpetrated on a numbingly large scale, but Fong illumines individual grief and dignity. In her travels across urban and rural China, she meets a matchmaker, a barefoot doctor, an abandoned husband, a former family planning official responsible for hundreds of forced abortions, a crusader against corruption in China's adoption system, and numerous parents, grandparents, and children. VERDICT The vast ironies and evils of the one-child policy are hard to comprehend, but Fong's human-scale portrayal of individual stories, weaving in her own fraught journey toward motherhood as well, makes for an approachable and edifying treatment.--Janet Ingraham Dwyer, State Lib. of Ohio, Columbus

      Copyright 2016 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

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  • English

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