2018
DOI: 10.2139/ssrn.3668329
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Dilemmas of State-Led Environmental Conservation in China: Environmental Target Enforcement and Public Participation in Minqin County

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Cited by 3 publications
(6 citation statements)
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“…Minqin County is an example of groundwater overdraft driven by unsustainable economic targets and grain quotas. By the early 2000s, 32,000 people had left Minqin as “ecological refugees” and 20,000 ha of farmland had been abandoned (Mao & Zhang, ). In 2007, the prime minister called the preservation of Minqin a “national security issue” and the Shiyang River Basin Management Plan was designed to reduce groundwater abstraction in Minqin from 517 to 89 Mm 3 by 2010.…”
Section: Searching For Success Storiesmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…Minqin County is an example of groundwater overdraft driven by unsustainable economic targets and grain quotas. By the early 2000s, 32,000 people had left Minqin as “ecological refugees” and 20,000 ha of farmland had been abandoned (Mao & Zhang, ). In 2007, the prime minister called the preservation of Minqin a “national security issue” and the Shiyang River Basin Management Plan was designed to reduce groundwater abstraction in Minqin from 517 to 89 Mm 3 by 2010.…”
Section: Searching For Success Storiesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The 2007 plan introduced new measures, including subsidies for drip irrigation and greenhouses, individual crop‐and‐area‐based quotas (adjustable according to the quantity of surface water available), water pricing, cutting electricity to private wells outside the community, using prepaid cards to implement quotas at each well, buying back wells, and establishing groundwater user associations to implement the measures (Aarnoudse, Bluemling, Wester, & Qu, ; Mao & Zhang, ).…”
Section: Searching For Success Storiesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…However, few of them have yet managed to take over 'male' roles outside the home, particularly with respect to joining village committees and participating in the governance and management of the village's natural resources. As a result, there is growing concern that the gap left in village life by the migrant men is allowing both land and minerals to be exploited for the personal gain of powerful individuals rather than being managed for the good of all the village residents (Kostka and Mol, 2013;Mao and Zhang, 2018).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Attempts have been made by the Beijing Government to widen local participation in resource management as a means of improving environmental governance (Kostka and Mol, 2013;Johnson, 2014;Mao and Zhang, 2018). However, few village committees have responded, and concerns are growing that, without the migrant men to oversee them, many local officials are 'unruly' (Johnson, 2014: p. 241) and unable, or unwilling, to prevent the degradation of their village's environment and common pool resources.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The restrictive targets were linked to the annual evaluations of state bureaucrats and the amount of fiscal transfer payments allotted to local governments (van Rooij et al., 2017). Nevertheless, reliance on quantitative targets to assess regulation enforcement has led to widespread manipulation of statistics, and the political pressure to achieve short-term policy outcomes has undermined the long-term sustainability of environmental institutions (Eaton & Kostka, 2014; Kostka, 2016; Mao & Zhang, 2018; Ran, 2017). Concurrent with the development of the top-down, direct-command approach of environmental governance, the Chinese central government has gradually expanded the regulatory landscape to allow participation from stakeholders outside of the bureaucracy.…”
Section: Environmental Regulation and Enforcement In China: A Brief Overviewmentioning
confidence: 99%