Abstract The purpose of this research is to emphasize the extent to which government policy violates human rights of Chinese women. Government policy is important for domestic organizations. Government policies are focused on supporting political, economic and social problems that may adversely affect the function of the state. When implementation was deemed successful, the policy of the rapidly growing government proved to be effective and effective. The one-child policy has been proved to be successful in reducing the population size.
When most people understand China's one child policy, they usually claim that it is a violation of basic human rights. This may be true, but the one-child policy is working to lower China's natural growth rate. Nonetheless, the one-child policy does not stop population growth, and it is estimated that the population of the United States will increase significantly by the year 2000. On the other hand, without it, the population of China will reach enormous numbers. Implementing such policies in other countries such as the United States is highly likely to cause strong opposition from organizations such as women's rights movement. One possibility for avoiding civil unrest is not to formulate actual policies but to promote television, radio and other forms of communication that strongly encourages two children, or one family's family It is to use.
The one-child policy is challenged by human rights abuses to determine the size of an appropriate family. According to the declaration of the International Conference on Human Rights in 1968, "parents have basic human rights to determine the number and intervals of children freely and responsibly." According to the British "Daily Telegraph" report, Within 20 million people in Guangdong Province Huaiqia County, abortion and disinfection quotas were set within. According to the article, local authorities were forced to purchase portable ultrasound equipment to identify abortion candidates in remote villages. This article also reports that women who were pregnant for 8.5 months are usually forced to miscarry by saline injection.
China's one child policy is largely harmed by human rights violations and laws. As they have their own official vocabulary as a means of protecting the harmony and identity of the community, the right to implement population-related policies is the responsibility of each country, and all of the economic, international population development conference Social and environmental diversity of moral values that we consider to take religion into account (cairo 1994). This policy also declines the basic human rights of the couple and freely decides the number and interval of children. The Chinese government considers this policy to be "an obligation to act responsibly in a manner that is beneficial to families and communities as a whole" (Population and Development Review, 1996).