Governance of Biodiversity Conservation in China And Taiwan

(Kiana) #1
awareness of university students in Beijing, China’, Journal of Contemporary China, 12
(36) (August), 533.


  1. Personal interview with Green Camp activist, Tsinghua University, Beijing, 25 May, 2005.

  2. Some scholars estimate that the number of grassroots organizations is larger than 200000.
    See E. Knup (1997), ‘Environmental NGOs in China: an overview’, China Environment
    Series, (l), 9–15; and D. Viederman (1998), ‘Save the planet, build civil society: democracy
    gains from Chinese environmental effort’, Global Beat Issue Brief, (37) (22 June).

  3. Information on the UYO is drawn from J. Marc Foggin’s ‘Highland encounters: building
    new partnerships for conservation and sustainable development in the Yangtze River
    headwaters, the heart of the Tibetan Plateau’, a book chapter commissioned by the
    Innovative Communities Initiative, a joint project of the United Nations University and the
    UNEP (September 2003).

  4. Critical Ecosystem Partnership Fund (or CEPF) is a joint initiative of Conservational
    International, the Global Environmental Facility, the government of Japan, the MacArthur
    Foundation and the World Bank. The partnership focuses on advancing conservation of
    biodiversity hotspots. See http://www.cepf.net and CEPF Fact Sheet, January 2003.

  5. Conservation International, Building Conservation Capacity among NGOs in the Mountains
    of Southwest China, Beijing, no date available.

  6. Ibid.

  7. The Nature Conservancy, China Program, April 2004 report.

  8. For a view of the change in dynamics of discourse that TNC’s work in Yunnan represents,
    see Litzinger, Ralph (2004), ‘The mobilization of “nature”: perspectives from North-West
    Yunnan’, China Quarterly, (178) (June), 488–504.

  9. Personal interview with TNC Staff Director, Kunming, 27 May, 2005.

  10. See WWF (2003), 2001-03 WWF China Programme Report, Beijing.

  11. Personal interview with Communications Officer, WWF, Beijing, 1 July, 2004.

  12. Personal interviews with INGO Directors, Beijing, 22 June, 2004; 23 June, 2004; 10
    January, 2005; 11 January; 2005 and 26 May, 2005, and program materials.

  13. See Wapner, Paul (1995), ‘Politics beyond the state: environmental activism and world civic
    politics’, World Politics, (47) (April), 311–40.

  14. Qin Chuan (2005), ‘Government turns up NGO volume’, China Daily, 26 April, p. 5.

  15. Yang (2005), op cit, n. 37, p. 56.

  16. See Hu Kanping and Yu Xiaogang (2005), ‘Bridge over troubled waters’, in Jennifer Turner
    (ed.), Promoting Sustainable River Basin Governance, Tokyo: IDE-JETO, p. 129.

  17. ‘Illegal logging exposé lands reporter a beating’, China Daily, 23 February, 2005,
    p. 4.

  18. Ho (2001), op cit, n. 40, p. 917.

  19. Personal interview with ENGO representative, Beijing, 15 June, 2004.

  20. Liao Xiaoyi, cited in Ho (2001), op cit, n. 40, p. 916.

  21. Personal interview with the Secretary General of Wilderness Taiwan, Taipei, 1 August, 2005.

  22. World Wide Fund for Nature (2003), 2001-03 WWF China Programme Report, Beijing,
    pp. 25, 35.

  23. Personal interview with FON Director, Beijing, 14 May, 2004.

  24. Yang, David Da-hua (2000), ‘Civil society as an analytic lens for contemporary China’,
    China: An International Journal, 2 (1) (March), 10.

  25. For example, Bryner, Gary C. (2001) notes: ‘Environmental issues are marginalized if they
    are reduced to simply the agenda of special interest groups’. See his Gaia’s Wager:
    Environmental Movements and the Challenge to Sustainability, Lanham, MD: Rowman &
    Littlefield, p. 21.

  26. Ma Qiusha (2002), ‘Defining Chinese nongovernmental organizations’, Voluntas:
    International Journal of Voluntary and Nonprofit Organizations, 13 (2) (June), 128–9.

  27. For a glimpse of the debate about the relationship between the growth of civil society in
    China and democratization, see Johnson, Ian (2003), ‘The death and life of China’s civil
    society’, Perspectives, 1 (3), 551–54; David Yang (2000), op cit, n. 78; Rebecca Morse
    (2001), ‘China’s fledgling civil society: a force for democratization?’World Policy Journal,
    18 (1), 56–66; and Ho (2001), op cit, n. 40, pp. 893–921.


190 Governance of biodiversity conservation in China and Taiwan

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