Tuesday, September 7, 2010
Welcome to Women in Asia
Wednesday, September 12, 2007
Women and Nongovernmental Organizations (NGOs) in China
When the Communists came to power in 1949, they sought to abolish what they saw as feudal, patriarchal practices such as foot-binding and female infanticide. They passed a Marriage Law and other laws that gave equal rights to women, and promoted women’s participation in the workplace. Women were said to hold up half the sky in this new communist utopia. While all independent social organizations were abolished, the Communist Party created its own organizations to represent the interests of women, workers, and peasants. The Women’s Federation was the official party organization representing the interests of women for most of the Communist period.
Only in the last 20 years, have other social organizations – what we would call nongovernmental or nonprofit organizations (NGOs or NPOs) been allowed. These organizations have grown rapidly since the 1990s. For women’s NGOs, 1995 was a watershed year because the 4th World Women’s Conference was held in
Now there are many NGOs devoted to women’s issues, not just the Women’s Federation. Some examples include the Beijing University Women’s Law Studies and Legal Aid Center, Rural Women Knowing All, and the Maple Women Psychological Counseling Center of Beijing.
The growth of NGOs in
Before we get too optimistic about civil society and the possibilities for democratization in
Take the Beijing University Women’s Law Studies and Legal Aid Center for example. It is under
There are increasingly more and more grassroots NGOs in
Beijing University Center for Women’s Law Studies and Legal Services
The Center for Women’s Law Studies and Legal Services (hereafter referred to as the Center) was founded in December of 1995 by the Law School of Beijing University with funds provided by the Ford Foundation. The Center is a nongovernmental, non-profit organization devoted to serving the legal needs of Chinese women. The Center has made significant progress in providing legal aid to women, taking on various cases, conducting research on legal affairs, and organizing and participating in conferences on women’s issues. It has received extensive press coverage from the People’s Daily, Worker’s Daily, CCTV, Beijing TV and many other newspapers and magazines. But the Center also operates with a shortage of funds and personnel and must carry out its work in a society that has little understanding of the concept of legal aid.
The Center’s origins go back to the early 1990s when several events gave greater attention to women’s issues. One was the Women’s Rights Protection Law which was passed in 1992. An even more important event was the 4th World Women’s Conference in
These three professors had the idea for the center which became a reality due to financial help from the Ford Foundation. Intially, the Center was associated with the Beijing Tonghe law office, but for political reasons and because of interference from the
The Center has an informative English-language website at http://www.woman-legalaid.org/index.php where you can look at an overview of the Center’s evolution (with pictures), and of the Center’s staff, and articles about different women’s issues in
