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China's Camel Country: Livestock and Nation-Building at a Pastoral Frontier [Pehme köide]

In recent years China has positioned itself as a champion of state-led resource conservation and sustainable development as it seeks to combat negative ecological effects of rapid economic growth and to adapt to climate change. In the arid rangelands of Inner Mongolia, state environmentalism has involved grassland conservation policies that target pastoralists and their animals, blamed for causing desertification. Drawing on ethnographic fieldwork in Alasha, an arid region in the far west of China’s Inner Mongolia Autonomous Region, Thomas White illustrates how state environmentalism has—through grazing bans, enclosure, and resettlement—transformed the lives of ethnic Mongol pastoralists and their animals. However, while surveillance and securitization in China’s ethnic-minority regions have deepened in recent years, this book examines a form of counterpolitics in the midst of the state’s intensifying nation-building project. Alasha now styles itself as “China’s Camel Country,” where the domestic camel has special status, exempted from many grassland conservation policies that apply to other types of livestock. This study is both a political biography of the Bactrian camel and a work of political ecology addressing critical questions of conservation, state power, and rural livelihoods. In exploring how the greening of the Chinese state affects the entangled lives of humans and animals at the margins of the nation-state, it contributes to debates in political anthropology, animal studies, political ecology, and more-than-human geography.

Arvustused

"China's Camel Country is a rich exploration of how people in rural Alasha are using China's development discourse and political economy to negotiate their future. Again and again, White shows how Chinese state and market policies and pressures work at cross-purposes, creating opportunities but also stymieing success in any one direction. His sensitive portrait of Alasha in contemporary transition will draw comparison not just with other areas in China, but also with Inner Mongolia's past. . . . [ A]n invaluable portrait of rural Mongolia life in modern China."

(China Quarterly)

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Thomas White is lecturer in China and sustainable development at King's College London.