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Ecological Migration

Environmental Policy in China

by Masayoshi Nakawo (Volume editor) Yuki Konagaya (Volume editor) Shinjilt (Volume editor)
©2010 Edited Collection 284 Pages

Summary

In the context of the current wave of global environmental concern, this book considers measures aimed at solving environmental problems, investigating the example of ecological migration.
The term «ecological migration» refers to the organized migration of people engaged in occupations that cause ecological destruction, aimed at rehabilitating and conserving the affected areas. In the vast arid and semi-arid regions that constitute the steppes of Inner Mongolia, grassland vegetation is in imminent danger due to overgrazing. Therefore, the herders are made to migrate to other areas in order to ensure regeneration of the affected grasslands. This book’s contributions are guided by questions such as: What has been the result of the strategy of ecological migration? Have the grasslands successfully been conserved? And can the desertification of Inner Mongolia be prevented?
The essays collected in this volume originate from a workshop on ecological migration held in Beijing, China, in 2004, and were published in Japanese and Chinese, both in 2005. They have been adopted as a textbook in university classes in Japan and China, and were updated and translated for the English publication.

Details

Pages
284
Publication Year
2010
ISBN (PDF)
9783035102062
ISBN (Softcover)
9783034303439
DOI
10.3726/978-3-0351-0206-2
Language
English
Publication date
2011 (July)
Keywords
East Asia Environmental Protection Chinese Cultural Ethnology
Published
Bern, Berlin, Bruxelles, Frankfurt am Main, New York, Oxford, Wien, 2010. 284 pp., num. ill., tables and graphs

Biographical notes

Masayoshi Nakawo (Volume editor) Yuki Konagaya (Volume editor) Shinjilt (Volume editor)

Masayoshi Nakawo is executive director of the National Institutes for the Humanities, a Japanese Inter-University Research Institute Cooperation, and a Professor Emeritus of the Research Institute for Humanity and Nature, which is dedicated to the promotion of interdisciplinary research projects concerning global issues. Yuki Konagaya is a professor at the National Museum of Ethnology, Japan, and one of the key researchers for Mongol Studies. Shinjilt is an Associate Professor at the Kumamoto University, Japan. He originates from Inner Mongolia, China.

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Title: Ecological Migration