China, Population and demographic crisis

Across China’s west, the Communist Party is placing children in boarding schools to assimilate a generation of Tibetans into ...
An curved arrow pointing right. China is abandoning its one-child policy after more than 30 years. The policy was implemented in order to curb population growth, but it has had unintended ...
More than 30 years after China implemented its one-child policy as a means of population control ... s increasing rates of urbanization and the urban hierarchy have not gone unnoticed by ...
“They” were Chinese government officials, and their tactics were standard practice in China since the implementation of the one-child policy in 1979. Unlike so many instances of this ...
Demography may not be destiny for some things like how people vote, but if enough factors align, it can determine the trajectory of a country’s future. For more than three and a half decades ...
China introduced its one-child policy in late 1979 to reduce the ... government's efforts to get people to have more children have not gone down well with many young people. The new stamps ...
In a recent interview, Robert Thomson, Managing Editor for The Wall Street Journal, talks with Dr. Henry Kissinger about China's one-child policy and how it might affect relations with the ...
Experts say the population in China is getting older with a smaller number of people in the workforce. The country's economic future could be at risk. Beijing's one child policy was in place ...
The one-child policy has been dying a slow death for years. Its official end won't change much for China.
China’s population has fallen for the third straight year, pointing to further demographic challenges for the world’s second most populous nation that is now facing both an aging population and an ...