Page 75 - Chinese Woman Living and Working
P. 75

62 CLODAGH WYLIE
            Shanghai Evening Post website—no date  provided, item on the  Shanghai Women Entrepreneurs
               Association website <http://www.shanghaiwhb.com> (accessed July 2000 ).
            Smith, P.M.  (2000) ‘People to People  Ambassador Programs Women Leaders in Education,
               Business and Law Delegation to the People’s Republic of China’, China Trip Outline June 30–
               July 1 2000 ; <http://faculty.newc.edu/PSmith/China/china_trip_outline.htm> (accessed
               2000).
            Unger, J. (1993) ‘Urban Families in the Eighties: An Analysis of Chinese Surveys’, in D.Davis and
               S.Harrell (eds) Chinese Families in the Post-Mao Era, Studies on China 17, Be, Berkeley: University
               of California Press, 25–49.
            Verdery, K. (1996) What Was Socialism and What Comes Next? Princeton, NJ: Princeton University
               Press.
            Wang, Z. (2000) ‘Gender Employment and Women’s Resistance’, in E.J.Perry and M.Seldon (eds)
               Chinese Society: Change, Conflict and Resistance, London: Routledge.
            Woo, M.Y.K. (1994) ‘Chinese Women Workers: The Delicate Balance between Protection and
               Equality’, in C.K.Gilmartin, G.Hershatter, L.Rofel, T.White (eds) Engendering China: Women,
               Culture, and the State, Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 279–95.
            Xiao, W. (1999) ‘Nüxing: xin shiji mianlinde jiaoyu tiaozhan’ [Women: Educational Challenges
               Faced in the New Century], Nüxing yuekan (Women’s Monthly), April, 24–6.
            Yan, Y. (1996) The Flow of Gifts: Reciprocity and Social Networks in a Chinese Village, Stanford, CA:
               Stanford University Press.
            Yang, M.M. (1994) Gifts, Favors, and Banquets: The Art of Social Relationships in China, Ithaca, NY:
               Cornell University Press.
            You, J. (1998)  China’s Enterprise Reform: Changing State/Society Relations after Mao, London:
               Routledge.
            Yue, M. (2000) ‘In Virtual China, Women May Be Second-class Netizens’, e21times ( August 28 ).
               Available online  at <http://www.english1.e21times.com/asp/sacd. asp?  r=412&p=l>
               (accessed 27/8/2001).
   70   71   72   73   74   75   76   77   78   79   80