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  1.  60
    Exploring ‘Glorious Motherhood’ in Chinese Abortion Law and Policy.Weiwei Cao - 2015 - Feminist Legal Studies 23 (3):295-318.
    Currently, abortion can be lawfully performed in China at any gestational stage for a wide range of social and medical reasons. I critically explore the Chinese regulatory model of abortion in order to examine its practical effects on women. Although I focus on the post-Maoist abortion law, I also analyse the imperial Confucianism-dominated regulation and the Maoist ban on abortion in order to scrutinise the emergence of the notion of ‘glorious motherhood’. By examining how ‘glorious motherhood’ is constructed and reinforced (...)
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  2.  19
    Restricted to Half the Sky: Unwanted Girls, Battered Wives and Inglorious Women.Weiwei Cao - 2017 - Feminist Legal Studies 25 (3):365-373.
    The proverb ‘women hold up half the sky’ was created by the Maoist government 64 years ago in order to show that women in ‘New China’ have equal power and rights to their male peers. I selected three photographs for my FLaK zine and called them ‘unwanted girls’, ‘battered wives’ and ‘inglorious women’. To examine the relevance of the proverb in Modern China, I will discuss three women-related problems behind these photographs and analyse their cultural and legal causes. By doing (...)
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    The Regulation of Reproduction in New China: Seven Decades On.Weiwei Cao - 2021 - Feminist Legal Studies 30 (1):97-106.
    This commentary examines the laws and policies on reproduction adopted in New China since 1949 and reflects on how they have regulated womanhood and whether they have promoted gender equality. By doing so, it also demonstrates how the regulation of reproduction constructs the notion of an ideal womanhood in order to justify the state’s enforcement of the population policy and its exercise of control over women’s fertility.
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