Governance of Biodiversity Conservation in China And Taiwan

(Kiana) #1
Environmental Politics, 3 (3), 108. See also Peter Dauvergne (2001), Loggers and
Degradation in the Asia-Pacific(Cambridge: Cambridge University Press).


  1. Liu Chun-yu, ‘Areca Nuts in Taiwan’, TED case study no. 766, 2004; see
    http://www.american.edu/ted/areca.htm.

  2. See http://www.fftc.agnet.org/library/article/eb483a.html.

  3. Wu Huilong, ‘Impacts of Planting Beetle Nuts on the Hillside’, see
    http://140.111.1.192/militry/warondrugs/page-105.htm. See also Chen Qinglong, Jiajun Wu,
    Shanzhou Xie and Guozhen Huang (2004), Shuitu baochi chuli dui doupo guoyuan shuitu
    liushi ji guoshu changzhang zhi yingxinag [Impacts of Conservation of Water and Soil on
    Land Loss], report of the Council of Agriculture no. 86—110-091-04, Taipei: Council of
    Agriculture.

  4. Ibid, p. 120.

  5. Liang Chao, ‘Probe Launched into Erosion Threat’, China Daily, 5 July 2005, p. 2.

  6. Cao Desheng, ‘Nation Fighting Ever-Engulfing Deserts’, China Daily, 18 June 2004, p. 2.

  7. Gluckman, R., ‘The Desert Storm’, Asiaweek, 13 October 2000, pp. 3–6. See also Ma Lie,
    ‘Desertification Threatens Northwest Areas’, China Daily, 6 September 2004, p. 3; and
    Jiang Weiyu and Fanglin Chen (2004), ‘Controlling Desertification in North China’
    (in Chinese), Journal of Arid Land Resources and Environment, 26 (5) (September),
    30–37.

  8. Byster, Leslie and Ted Smith, ‘From Silicon Valley to Green Silicon Island’, March 2001,
    http://www.svtc.org/icrt/asia/taiwan3_01.htm.

  9. See Hough, P. (1993), The Global Politics of Pesticides – Forging Consensus from
    Conflicting Interests, London: Earthscan Publishers, p. 37. See also Quan Hao and Huang
    Yeru (2003), ‘Chinese Perspectives on Pesticides in the Environment’, in Zafar Adeel (ed.),
    East Asian Experience in Environmental Governance, Tokyo: United Nations University
    Press, pp. 44–63.

  10. Prenton, Libby (2005), ‘Ecological Agriculture: The Answer to All our Problems?’,
    unpublished manuscript.

  11. Goldsmith, Edward (1997), ‘Can the Environment Survive the Global Economy?’, The
    Ecologist, 27 (6), 242.

  12. See, for example, Elizabeth Economy’s (2004) vivid description of the ‘death of the Huai
    River’, in The River Runs Black, Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press, pp. 1–9.

  13. State Forestry Administration (2002), China National Wetlands Conservation Action Plan,
    Beijing: China Forestry Publishing House, p. 19.

  14. See Hsu Haigen, Wang Jianmin, Zhang Sheng, and Wang Changyung (eds) (2004), A Study
    of Key Issues under the Convention on Biological Diversity: Alien Species Invasion,
    Biosafety, Genetic Resources(in Chinese), Beijing, Science Press, and also Li Zhenyu and
    Xia Yan (2002),Invasive Alien Species in China(in Chinese), Beijing: China Forestry Press;
    and Biodiversity Working Group, CCICED (2001), Conserving China’s Biodiversity (II),
    Beijing: China Environmental Science Press, pp. 101–77.

  15. See Dogan, Mattei and Dominique Pelassy (1990), How to Compare Nations: Strategies in
    Comparative Politics, 2nd edn, Chatham, NJ: Chatham House Publishers.

  16. To the People’s Republic of China, Taiwan (or the Republic of China, the country’s formal
    name) is a renegade province of China and not an independent nation-state. However,
    Taiwan does meet formal definitions of nation-states in comparative politics and
    international relations. It has all the appurtenances of a state: people residing in a territory,
    under the control of a government that has sufficient force (a free-standing army, police) to
    compel obedience to the law. It is recognized internationally by about two dozen other states,
    and under the name ‘Chinese-Taipei’ or ‘Taiwan’ participates in a few international bodies,
    such as the International Olympics Association, the Asia Pacific Economic Conference
    (APEC), and the Asian Development Bank. Taiwan has trading relationships with most of
    the world’s nations. It also comports to definitions of a nation in that most of its residents
    share an identity with the current status and condition of Taiwan as a sovereign entity,
    though they may disagree about its future course (independence or unification with China).

  17. Shapiro, Judith (2001), Mao’s War Against Nature: Politics and the Environment in
    Revolutionary China, New York: Cambridge University Press.


Introduction 17
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