essay

A case study of the dynamics of family law and social change in rural China

chinese family law and social changeSeattle • Published In 1978 • Pages: 217-260, 503-527

By: Buxbaum, David C..

Abstract
This essay is a study of marriage and residence patterns in Taiwan and mainland China. Buxbaum examines the interrelation between positive and customary family law in rural China, and shows how changes in the codified law can bring about changes in social practice. A case study of a rural Taiwanese village illustrates this phenomenon, and includes specific information on recent changes in family law as well as statistical information on marriage and residence patterns throughout the twentieth century.
Subjects
Information sources listed in other works
Comparative evidence
Sociocultural trends
Regulation of marriage
Arranging a marriage
Nuptials
Residence
Household
Extended families
Lineages
Clans
Legal norms
culture
Taiwan Hokkien
HRAF PubDate
1995
Region
Asia
Sub Region
East Asia
Document Type
essay
Evaluation
Creator Type
Political Scientist
Document Rating
4: Excellent Secondary Data
5: Excellent Primary Data
Analyst
David Sherwood
Field Date
1966-1967
Coverage Date
not specified
Coverage Place
Taiwan, village in the Hai-Shan region, Kan-yüan li
Notes
David C. Buxbaum
The section of this essay (pp. 248-260) that deals with family law in mainland China has been indexed for category 171
Includes bibliography
LCCN
76007781
LCSH
Taiwanese