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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
10 pages in length. The explosive opposition to China's one-child policy act has been supported by incidents of inhumane proportions. Given the fact that large families are representative of China's inherent history, imposing restrictions that allow only one child per family --otherwise leaving the parents to face fines, taxes and the absence of governmental support -- has been looked upon as barbarous for such a developed nation. Issues of hostility toward women and the overwhelming statistical evidence of abortion-related medical concerns have turned what once might have been a reasonably good idea into one that carries with it significant drawbacks with regard to human life. Bibliography lists 7 sources.
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10 pages (~225 words per page)
File: LM1_TLCChin1.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
allow only one child per family --otherwise leaving the parents to face fines, taxes and the absence of governmental support -- has been looked upon as barbarous for such a
developed nation. Issues of hostility toward women and the overwhelming statistical evidence of abortion-related medical concerns have turned what once might have been a reasonably good idea into one
that carries with it significant drawbacks with regard to human life. II. A BAD IDEA Mr. and Mrs. Wong, a recently married
couple, had dreamt of a large family ever since they began planning their future together, but they were particularly desirous of a baby girl as the first addition. When
it came time to actually create that family, they knew that if they did no abide by the birth control laws of their land, they would find themselves in a
great deal of trouble; after all, China already had far too many people to support on the relatively small plot of land upon which the nation stood. They did
not want to give up their dream of one day having a big family, but they knew that the option was not theirs at the present time. Still, they
were bound and determined to have a baby girl, in spite of the fact that a significant amount of pressure was put on women to abort all but male fetuses.
The Wongs were in a quandary without much hope to raise the family they always wanted. There have been a number of
benefits that have come out of mandatory birth control in China. Not only has the nations birth rate "dropped significantly" (Wang, 1995, p. 12) over the past decades, but
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