Governance of Biodiversity Conservation in China And Taiwan

(Kiana) #1

  1. Yang Da-hua David (2004), ‘Civil society as an analytic lens for contemporary China’,
    China: an International Journal, 2 (1) (March), 1–27.

  2. Ho (2001), op cit, n. 40, p. 904.

  3. Howell (2004), op cit, n. 29, p. 163.

  4. Ma, Qiusha (2002), op cit, n. 80, p. 130.

  5. Ho, Peter (2000), ‘Greening without conflict? Environmentalism, NGOs and civil society in
    China’, Development and Change, 32 , 893–921.

  6. Moore, Rebecca (2001), ‘China’s fledgling civil society: a force for democratization?’,
    World Policy Journal, (Spring), 59.

  7. Hsiao, Michael (2004), ‘Taiwan de feizhengfu zuzhi, minzu zhuanxing, yu minzhu zhili’
    [Taiwanese NGOs, democratic transition, and democratic governance] (in Chinese), Taiwan
    Minzhu Jikan [Taiwan Democracy Quarterly], 1 (1) (March), 69.

  8. Howell, Jude (2003), ‘New directions in civil society: organizing around marginalized
    interests’, in Jude Howell (ed.), Governance in China, Lanham, MD: Rowman & Littlefield
    Publisher, p. 149.

  9. See Economy, Elizabeth (2004), The River Runs Black, Ithaca, NY: Cornell University
    Press, pp. 254–55, for a discussion of the importance of this linkage.

  10. Tong Yanqi, ‘Zhuanxing shehui zhong de huanjing baohu yundong: taiwan he zhongguo
    dalu de bijiao yanjiu [Environmental movement in the transitional society: a comparative
    study of Taiwan and China] (in Chinese), in Maogui Zhang and Yongnian Zheng (eds)
    (2003), Liangan Shehui Yundong Fenxi [Social Movements across the Taiwan Strait], Taipei:
    Xinzhiran, pp. 391–414.


ENGOs, civil society and biodiversity conservation 191
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