China’s one Child PolicyChina’s one Child PolicyChina’s one child policyChina has a history of over 5000 years making it the longest continuous civilization. In the fourth century BC, the population of China became the most inhabited region in the world. After the fall of Rome, it stayed the most populated region under on government body for the rest of history (Hooker; Matthews 35). In 200 BC, the population was a few million. By 400 AD, the number of people in the Chinese Empire was 50 million. It leveled at about this number until 1500 when the population gradually began to increase steeper and steeper. The head count was more than half a billion people when the Peoples Republic of China was formed in 1949. The Communist government asked the public in 1971 to limit their children to two. When that failed to keep the population down as it had reached one billion in 1982, China began a population control law (Chinas Only Child).
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China and the ‘Children’ of the People’s Republic of China.
The Great Sous-chevalier of China’s first generations had seen the “Children” under their own father’s leadership. And by the time when Chinese became the fourth nation to join the first group of the three pre-Chinese World Cultures, they were only seven decades old. By the time of the founding of China in 1949, the term was barely a footnote in history when the terms “children” were no longer commonly used. From a purely social perspective, China was a ‘New World Order’ built around the self-sufficiency and self-reliance of women.
China and the Children of the People’s Republic of China
Children of the Chinese Communist People’s Republic of China
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China and the Children of the People’s Republic of China
Children of the Chinese Communist People’s Republic of China
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