References
- Bian, Yanjie (2000), “Wage and Job Inequalities in the Working Lives of Men and Women in Tianjin,” Re-Drawing Boundaries: Work, Households, and Gender in China, eds., B. Entwisle and G. Henderson, Berkeley: University of California Press: 111–133.
- Currier, Carrie (2007), “Bringing the Household Back In: The Restructuring of Women's Labor Choices in Beijing,” American Journal of Chinese Studies, 14(1): 61–81.
- Dalsimer, Marilyn and Laurie Nisonoff (1984), “The New Economic Readjustment Policies: Implications for Chinese Urban Working Women,” Review of Radical Political Economics, 16(1): 17–43.
- Donahoe, Debra Anne (1999), “Measuring Women's Work in Developing Countries,” Population and Development Review, 25(3): 543–576.
- Elson, Diane (1995), Male Bias in the Development Process, NY: Manchester University Press.
- Entwisle, Barbara and Gail Henderson (eds.) (2000), Re-Drawing Boundaries: Work, Households, and Gender in China, Berkeley: University of California Press.
- Evans, Harriet (2002), “Past, Perfect or Imperfect: Changing Images of the Ideal Wife,” Chinese Femininities/Chinese Masculinities: A Reader, eds. S. Brownell and J. Wasserstrom, Berkeley: University of California Press: 335–60.
- Fforde, Adam (1999), “From Plan to Market: the Economic Transition in Vietnam and China Compared,” Transforming Asian Socialism, eds., Anita Chan, Benedict J. Tria Kerkvliet, and Jonathan Unger, NY: Rowman and Littlefield Publishers, Inc.: 43–72.
- Guo, Rongxing (1999), How the Chinese Economy Works, NY: St. Martin's Press.
- Harrell, Stevan (2000), “The Changing the Meanings of Work in China,” Re-Drawing Boundaries: Work, Households, and Gender in China, eds., B. Entwisle and G. Henderson, Berkeley: University of California Press: 67–76.
- Henderson, Gail, Barbara Entwisle, Li Ying, Mingliang Yang, Siyvan Xu, and Fengying Zhai (2000), “Re-Drawing the Boundaries of Work: Views on the Meaning of Work (Gongzuo),” Re-Drawing Boundaries: Work Households, and Gender in China, eds., B. Entwisle and G. Henderson, Berkeley: University of California Press: 33–50.
- Hooper, Beverly (1984), “China's Modernization are Young Women Going to Lose out?” Modern China, 10(3): 317–44.
- Fredrich, Nauman Stiftung (1994), The Impact of Economic Reforms on the Situation of Women in China, Occasional Papers-Policy Analysis, No. 7, Beijing: Fredrich, Nauman Stiftung Foundation (December).
- Jankowiak, Wiliam (2002), “Proper Men and Proper Women: Parental Affection in the Chinese Family,” Chinese Femininities/Chinese Masculinities: A Reader, eds., S. Brownell and J. Wasserstrom, Berkeley: University of California Press: 361–79.
- Jefferson, Therese and John E. King (2001), “Never Intended to be a Theory of Everything”: Domestic Labor in Neoclassical and Marxian Economics,” Feminist Economics, 7(3): 71–101.
- Jones, Emily L. (1983), “The Courtesy Bias in South-East Asian Surveys” Social Research in Developing Countries, eds., M Bulmer and D.P. Warwick, NY: John Wiley and Sons, Ltd.: 253–260.
- Kerr, Joanna and Julie Delahanty (1996), Gender and Jobs in China's New Economy, Ottawa, Ontario: The North-South Institute.
- Knight, John and Lina Song (1999), The Rural-Urban Divide: Economic Disparities and Interactions in China, Hong Kong: Oxford University Press.
- Lau, Lawrence J., Yingyi Qian, and Gerard Roland (2000), “Reform without Losers: An Interpretation of China's Dual-Track Approach to Transition,” Journal of Political Economy, 108(1): 120–143.
- Mannheim, Jarol B. and Richard C. Rich (1995), Empirical Political Analysis: Research Methods in Political Science, White Plains, NY: Longman Publishers.
- National Bureau of Statistics (2002), Statistical Communiqué 2002, Beijing Municipal Statistics, www.stats.gov.cn/english/newrelease/statisticalreports/1200303120088.htm> [17 February 2005].
- Parish, William L. and Sarah Busse (2000), “Gender and Work,” Chinese Urban Life Under Reform: the Changing Social Contract, eds., W. Tang and W. L. Parish, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press: 209–231.
- Perry, Susan (1998), “Holding Up Half the Sky: Women in China,” Current History, (September): 279–284.
- Peterson, V. Spike and Anne Sisson Runyan (1999), Global Gender Issues: Dilemmas in World Politics, 2nd ed. Boulder, CO: Westview Press.
- Ping, Ping (2002), “State Women Workers in Chinese Economic Reform: The Transformation of Management Control and Firm Dependence,” Transforming Gender and Development in East Asia, ed., E. Chow, NY: Routledge: 141–164.
- Purcell, Kate (1986), “Work, Employment and Underemployment,” Key Variables in Social Investigation, ed. R. Burgess, Boston: Routledge and Kegan Paul.
- Riley, Nancy (1996), “Holding Half the Economy,” China Business Review, 23(1): 22–25.
- Rofel, Lisa (1994), “Liberation Nostalgia and a Yearning for Modernity,” Engendering China: Women, Culture and the State, eds., C. Gilmartin, G. Hershatter, L. Rofel and T. White, Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press: 226–249.
- Rosenthal, Elisabeth (1998), “China's Middle Class Savors Its New Wealth,” New York Times, (June 19, 1998): A1, A8.
- Smith, Bonnie (1993), “Forward,” The Inner Quarters: Marriage and the Lives of Chinese Women in the Sung Period, ed. P. B. Ebrey, Berkeley: University of California Press: ix–xii.
- Solinger, Dorothy (1995), “The Chinese Work Unit and Transient Labor in the Transition from Socialism,” Modern China, 21(2): 155–183.
- Summerfield, Gail (1994), “Effects of the Changing Employment Situation on Urban Chinese Women,” Review of Social Economy, 52(1): 40–59.
- Tang, Wenfang (2003), “An Introduction to Survey Research in China,” Issues and Studies, 39(1): 269–88.
- Tang, Wenfang and William Parish (2000), Chinese Urban Life Under Reform: The Changing Social Contract, NY: Cambridge University Press.
- Tsai, Kellee (1996), “Women and the State in Post-1949 Rural China,” Journal of International Affairs, 49(2): 493–525.
- Tsui, Ming and Lynne Rich (2002), “The Only Child and Educational Opportunity for Girls in Urban China,” Gender and Society, 16(1): 74–92.
- Wang, Shaoguang and Hu Angang (1999), The Political Economy of Uneven Development: The Case of China. Armonk, NY: M.E. Sharpe, Inc.
- Wang, Feng and Xuejin Zuo (1999), “Inside China's Cities: Institutional Barriers and Opportunities for Urban Migrants,” American Economic Review, 89(2): 276–280.
- Wuelker, Gabriele (1983), “Questionnaires in Asia,” Social Research in Developing Countries, eds., M. Bulmer and D.P. Warwick, NY: John Wiley and Sons Ltd.: 161–66.
- White, Gordon, Jude Howell and Xiaoyuan Shang (1996), In Search of Civil Society: Market Reform and Social Change in Contemporary China, Oxford: Clarendon Press.
- Wong, Linda (1994), “China's Urban Migrants—the Public Policy Challenge,” Pacific Affairs, 67(3): 335–355.
- Woo, Margaret Y.K. (1994), “Chinese Women Workers: The Delicate Balance between Protection and Equality” Engendering China: Women, Culture and the State, eds., C. Gilmartin, G. Hershatter, L. Rofel and T. White, Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press: 279–295.
- Wu, Naitao (1995), “Employment and Chinese Women,” Beijing Review, 38(10): 8–13.
- Yang, Quanhe and Fei Guo (1996), “Occupational Attainments of Rural to Urban Temporary Economic Migrants in China, 1985–1990,” International Migration Review, 30(3): 771–787.
- Zhang, Li (2000), “The Interplay of Gender, Space, and Work in China's Floating Population,” Re-Drawing Boundaries: Work, Households, and Gender in China, eds., B. Entwisle and G. Henderson, Berkeley: University of California Press: 171–196.
- Zheng, Wang (2003), “Gender, Employment and Women's Resistance,” Chinese Society: Change, Conflict and Resistance, (2nd edition), eds., E. J. Perry and M. Selden, NY: Routledge: 158–182.