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Sold people : traffickers and family life in North China

Title
Sold people : traffickers and family life in North China / Johanna S. Ransmeier.
ISBN
9780674971974
0674971973
Publication
Cambridge, Massachusetts : Harvard University Press, 2017.
Copyright Notice Date
©2017
Physical Description
ix, 395 pages : illustrations, maps ; 25 cm
Summary
Sold People considers human trafficking in China not as a symptom of social problems like poverty or famine, but as a widespread practice and imbedded process extending far beyond times of crisis into the very heart of family life. It follows the lives of sold people and their traffickers closely, demonstrating how the trade in people was shaped, encouraged, and even enabled by Chinese family structure. In 1910, the Qing government promulgated legislation to abolish slavery and prohibit trafficking. Reformers hoped that this would help usher China into an international community of modern nations. On the ground, the country's new police found these laws almost impossible to enforce. Urbanization, commercialization, industrialization, the development of modern transportation systems, and the fractious militarization that followed China's 1911 revolution created a perfect environment for entrepreneurial brokers to meet old needs with new criminal strategies. The dynasty's Republican successors struggled to eliminate the deeply entrenched and yet malleable trade in people.-- Provided by publisher.
Format
Books
Language
English
Added to Catalog
April 21, 2017
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references and index.
Contents
A young woman as portable property
The flow of trafficking in the Qing
New laws and emerging language
Fictive families and children in the marketplace
Moving beyond the reach of the law
The warlord's widow and the chief of police
Domestic bonds
Talking with traffickers.
Citation

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