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E-raamat: Activating China: Local Actors, Foreign Influence, and State Response

(The College of Wooster, USA)
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This book examines the effects of the transnational social and environmental advocacy of foreign NGOs in China. Based on three case studies, including China’s first participatory development project, its first successful case of transnational anti-dam activism, and its first national park project, the book challenges our typical understanding that global forces shape local outcomes. Drawing on ethnographic fieldwork in China and archival work in the United States, Matsuzawa sheds light on the entrepreneurial behaviors of Chinese activists, researchers, and government officials. She shows that global projects are often substantially transformed by local actors, despite the original intentions of their foreign collaborators and even China’s central government. Thus, it is argued that foreign NGOs are not as hegemonic or culturally imperialistic as is commonly viewed. Matsuzawa reveals that their goals may change profoundly as a result of their engagements with local actors on the ground. She offers a new theory of transnational advocacy together with an account of the Chinese party-state’s rising concerns over the influence of foreign NGOs. Activating China will be of interest to sociologists and political scientists working in the fields of social movement studies and activism in China.

List of illustrations and tables
viii
Acknowledgments ix
1 Devils on the doorstep: China and "foreign influence"
1(24)
2 Global discourses and NGO development inside China
25(27)
3 Development along China's periphery: Yunnan
52(25)
4 The Ford Foundation's poverty alleviation project: unintended consequences of participatory discourse
77(21)
5 NGO activism against the Nu River hydropower dam: horizontal dynamics in transnational activism
98(26)
6 Saving the last great places: the irony of China's first national park
124(30)
7 Conclusion: local actors in transnational activation
154(9)
Index 163
Setsuko Matsuzawa is Associate Professor of Sociology at the College of Wooster, USA.