
The Incompatibility of Rights
Gender Essentialism, Market Primacy, and Women's Work-Family Struggles in an Autocracy
Yun Zhou(Author)
Cambridge University Press
Will be published approx. on 2. July 2026
Book
Paperback/Softback
75 pages
978-1-009-65811-9 (ISBN)
Description
Why do self-described gender egalitarians support the state's draconian birth restriction? Following China's universal relaxation of its one-child policy in 2016, this Element excavates an under-theorized and distinctly political dimension of the gendered work-family conflict: the incompatibility of rights. I demonstrate that young urban Chinese women have experienced the expansion of their civil right to mother-through birth quota relaxation-as intensifying labor market gender discriminations and undermining their civil right to equal employment. To cope, these women turned to various individualistic strategies of rights-trading, such as promising to limit childbearing when seeking to secure employment. In this process, young Chinese women have further come to perceive employment and motherhood as two incompatible moral claims of entitlement. This Element highlights how women's quotidian work-family encounters present a fruitful yet underexplored site for understanding their political ideations and citizenship struggles. This title is also available as Open Access on Cambridge Core.
More details
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Language
English
Place of publication
Cambridge
United Kingdom
Product notice
Paperback (trade)
Illustrations
Worked examples or Exercises
ISBN-13
978-1-009-65811-9 (9781009658119)
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Additional editions

Yun Zhou
The Incompatibility of Rights
Gender Essentialism, Market Primacy, and Women's Work-Family Struggles in an Autocracy
Book
approx. 07/2026
Cambridge University Press
€68.50
Not yet published
Person
Content
1. Introduction; 2. Theorizing the gendered incompatibility of rights; 3. Studying employment and motherhood in authoritarian China; 4. Between Scylla and Charybdis; 5. Making rights incompatible; 6. The political implications of navigating rights at odds; 7. Bringing the state back in; Bringing work-family back in; 8. Epilogue.