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Non-State Care Homes for Older People as Third Sector Organisations in China's Transitional Welfare Economy

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  03 March 2006

LINDA WONG
Affiliation:
Department of Public and Social Administration, City University of Hong Kong, 83 Tat Chee Avenue, Hong Kong, China email: [email protected]
TANG JUN
Affiliation:
Center for Social Policy Studies, Institute of Sociology, China Academy of Social Science, 5 Jianguo Mennei Street, Beijing, China 100372

Abstract

The rise of the third sector has been a global welfare phenomenon. In China, the growth of social organisations has been a remarkable feature of the transitional society after the adoption of market reforms and political liberalisation. In its emergent welfare economy, the third sector has been hailed as a new growth point in social care as the state retreats from direct provision of welfare services. This article examines non-state care homes for older people in urban China based on a survey of 137 homes in three cities. It begins with a brief review of the theory of the third sector, non-governmental organisations and private markets in the production of welfare. This is followed by a discussion of third-sector organisations, markets and the state in the special context of China. The next section appraises the factors that contribute to the surge of non-state residential provision for the elderly. The final part of the article presents empirical findings on the development, key features and authority relations of 137 non-state care homes for older people. It is argued that their uniqueness marks them out as a special form of third-sector organisation in China's welfare economy.

Type
Article
Copyright
2006 Cambridge University Press

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