Xg. Zhou et Lr. Hou, Children of the cultural revolution: The state and the life course in the People's Republic of China, AM SOCIOL R, 64(1), 1999, pp. 12-36
From 1967 to 1978, the state "send-down" policy in the People's Republic of
China forced 17 million urban youth to live and work in rural areas. We ex
amine the life experiences of the children of the Cultural Revolution-those
youths who entered the labor force during this period The send-down episod
e provides a "natural experiment"-an opportunity to study the effects of st
ate policies on the life course in a state socialist society. We focus on t
wo theoretical issues: (1) how the effects of adverse state policies on the
life course were mediated by the structure of social stratification, and (
2) how the send-down experience affected individuals' later life course and
economic well-being. We compare and contrast patterns of entry inter the l
abor force, subsequent major life events, and the economic well-being of se
nt-down youth with those who stayed in urban areas Our findings how that al
l social groups were negatively affected by adverse state policies, but the
bureaucratic class had some capacity to reduce such negative effects on th
eir children. The send-down experience has had lasting effects on individua
ls' life courses, as reflected in the patterns of the later life course eve
nts and in the determinants of personal income.