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Domestic violence in China
Domestic violence in China involves violence or abuse by intimate partners or family members against one another. Intimate partner violence (IPV) by the man is the most common type of domestic violence: a 2005 American Journal of Public Health report found that 1 out of 5 Chinese women had experienced physical violence from their partner in the past year. Although China acknowledged that domestic violence was a problem in the 1930s, it has only become a visible issue in the past few decades due to economic and social changes in the 1980s.

Background
Traditionally, Chinese families followed a hierarchical structure in which the husband had authority over most household decisions. As the household was the man's domain, any violence he committed against his wife was generally seen as his family's private matter and subsequently disregarded. In the 1980s, a mixture of factors including China's increasing international presence, improved academic and employment opportunities for women, and a more open political climate led to strengthened efforts to address domestic violence and, in particular, violence against women.

Demographics
While violence against women is the most common manifestation of domestic violence, it is not the only form. Domestic violence remains an issue for people regardless of their age or gender.

Children
Domestic violence with respect to children is a largely ignored issue in China due to the nebulous distinction between discipline and child abuse. Although a much stronger sentiment prior to the 1980s, the saying "beating is caring and scolding is intimacy" still holds traction for some families. A 2001 survey by the China Law Society found that 71.9% of the 3543 people surveyed had been beaten by their parents when they were children.

Gender Differences
A 2004 International Family Planning Perspectives survey found that, including mutual violence, 34% of respondents had experienced male-on-female violence and 18% had experienced female-on-male violence.

Original Wikipedia Article
Domestic violence in China is a problem as in many parts of Asia.

Social dynamics
China has a high rate of domestic violence. In 2004, the All-China Women’s Federation compiled survey results to show that thirty percent of the women in China experienced domestic violence within their homes.

The true extent of domestic violence is unclear due to the lack of related law and execution of the law. The Chinese government is considering taking legal proceeding to prosecute men who abuse women. The government is in the process of "planning" to pass a "draft of anti-domestic violence law".

The China's society is severely patriarchal, and public discrimination based upon gender is common. This is part due to the incompleteness and chaos of the Chinese legal system as a whole.

Male victims
The US State Department reported in 2007 that there had been a significant increase in the prevalence of domestic violence in the People's Republic of China involving Chinese women committing violence against Chinese men.