|
Showing 1 - 4 of
4 matches in All Departments
After over 30 years of reform and opening up, China's aggregate
economic volume is now the second largest in the world. Over the
past decade many provinces in the western region of China have
implemented ecological migration projects of different scales,
which have attracted considerable attention both in China and
abroad. The projects indicate, first, that there is an urgent need
for this type of endeavor: whether the goal is to reduce poverty or
to protect the environment, we need to move the poor populations
out of the ecologically fragile regions. Secondly, the projects
indicate that the Chinese government is capable of meeting this
need. Migration projects are complex and costly and without
sufficient financial resources and systematic planning, migration
may fail to reduce poverty, and could even aggravate it. The rapid
economic growth in China, however, makes such migration projects
viable.
This book assesses Ecological Migration and Precision Poverty
Alleviation Measures, based on research conducted in Ningxia.
"Resettling residents currently living in poor areas" is an
important measure for "precise poverty alleviation." China's
central government has provided extraordinary support for these
areas, so as to help with "removing poverty nests," "changing
poverty industries," and "pulling out the roots of poverty."This
book is mainly based on research conducted in Ningxia, one of the
earliest areas in China to achieve poverty alleviation and
development through immigration and relocation. Since the Twelfth
Five-Year Plan, Ningxia's ecological migration has been integrated
into the process of new urbanization and industrialization. Poverty
alleviation and relocation not only involves regional transfer,
industrial transformation, and changes in livelihood, but also the
social adaptation and integration of migrant groups. In addition to
examining these aspects, the book shares stories of how
impoverished individuals have succeeded in changing their fates.
Over the past three decades, China's economic structure, direction
and international presence have undergone a dramatic
transformation. This rapid rise and China's enormous success in
economic terms has created new challenges, and this book examines
how the Chinese economy can continue to flourish, whilst at the
same time protecting the environment and giving people more equal
access to the benefits of the country's economic development.
Examining the key issues surrounding China's continued sustainable
development, in economic, political, social and more traditional
environmental terms, this book assesses the costs of China's rapid
development to date and in turn asks whether this can be
maintained. The contributors show that the idea of sustainable
development must take into account more than just the physical
environment, and that there are additional problems relating to the
sustainability of China's economic growth that are much more
complicated. Divided into two broad sections, the book looks first
at the broader issues of sustainability in China, before turning to
the more classic idea of sustainability, that of the environment.
In doing so, the contributors show that sustainability is a far
more complex phenomenon than is often assumed, and that economic
and social sustainability are inherently linked to linked to
environmental sustainability. Dealing with what are arguably the
greatest challenges facing China today, this book will be will be
of great interests to students and scholars of Chinese studies,
Chinese economics and Chinese politics, as well as those interested
in development studies and sustainable development more broadly.
Over the past three decades, China's economic structure, direction
and international presence have undergone a dramatic
transformation. This rapid rise and China's enormous success in
economic terms has created new challenges, and this book examines
how the Chinese economy can continue to flourish, whilst at the
same time protecting the environment and giving people more equal
access to the benefits of the country's economic development.
Examining the key issues surrounding China's continued sustainable
development, in economic, political, social and more traditional
environmental terms, this book assesses the costs of China's rapid
development to date and in turn asks whether this can be
maintained. The contributors show that the idea of sustainable
development must take into account more than just the physical
environment, and that there are additional problems relating to the
sustainability of China's economic growth that are much more
complicated. Divided into two broad sections, the book looks first
at the broader issues of sustainability in China, before turning to
the more classic idea of sustainability, that of the environment.
In doing so, the contributors show that sustainability is a far
more complex phenomenon than is often assumed, and that economic
and social sustainability are inherently linked to linked to
environmental sustainability. Dealing with what are arguably the
greatest challenges facing China today, this book will be will be
of great interests to students and scholars of Chinese studies,
Chinese economics and Chinese politics, as well as those interested
in development studies and sustainable development more broadly.
|
|