The effects of China's grassland contract policy on Mongolian herders' attitudes towards grassland management in northeastern Inner Mongolia

China's Inner Mongolia Autonomous Region is experiencing high levels of grassland degradation partially as a result of government policies to sedentarize nomadic pastoralists and privatize collective grasslands. Previous research suggests that these policies have reduced Mongolian pastoralists&...

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Main Author: Thomas J. Conte
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of Arizona Libraries 2015-12-01
Series:Journal of Political Ecology
Online Access:https://journals.uair.arizona.edu/index.php/JPE/article/view/21079
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spelling doaj-2ef091667f554ab58e8d9063998c3fc62020-11-25T03:35:57ZengUniversity of Arizona LibrariesJournal of Political Ecology1073-04512015-12-01221799710.2458/v22i1.2107920513The effects of China's grassland contract policy on Mongolian herders' attitudes towards grassland management in northeastern Inner MongoliaThomas J. Conte0Rutgers University, USAChina's Inner Mongolia Autonomous Region is experiencing high levels of grassland degradation partially as a result of government policies to sedentarize nomadic pastoralists and privatize collective grasslands. Previous research suggests that these policies have reduced Mongolian pastoralists' ability to effectively manage grasslands and cope with negative climatic events. Herders in New Barag Right Banner (n = 50) representing both sedentary and mobile livestock management strategies were asked to respond to a scaled survey regarding their attitudes towards the effectiveness of their current grassland management strategies and their perceptions regarding the future of pastoralism in Inner Mongolia. Inter-rater reliability and MannWhitney U Tests were utilized to compare the attitudes towards grassland management and the future viability of livestock production and to test whether or not sedentary and mobile herders share the same attitudes towards these facets of their pastoral way of life. There is both high intra and inter-group agreement on the survey variables across settlement categories, indicating that sedentary and mobile herders share the same attitudinal orientations regardless of their settlement patterns. The implications of these results for future grassland policy and sustainable livestock production are also discussed. Keywords: pastoralism, China, Inner Mongolia, grassland policy, privatization, marketizationhttps://journals.uair.arizona.edu/index.php/JPE/article/view/21079
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Thomas J. Conte
spellingShingle Thomas J. Conte
The effects of China's grassland contract policy on Mongolian herders' attitudes towards grassland management in northeastern Inner Mongolia
Journal of Political Ecology
author_facet Thomas J. Conte
author_sort Thomas J. Conte
title The effects of China's grassland contract policy on Mongolian herders' attitudes towards grassland management in northeastern Inner Mongolia
title_short The effects of China's grassland contract policy on Mongolian herders' attitudes towards grassland management in northeastern Inner Mongolia
title_full The effects of China's grassland contract policy on Mongolian herders' attitudes towards grassland management in northeastern Inner Mongolia
title_fullStr The effects of China's grassland contract policy on Mongolian herders' attitudes towards grassland management in northeastern Inner Mongolia
title_full_unstemmed The effects of China's grassland contract policy on Mongolian herders' attitudes towards grassland management in northeastern Inner Mongolia
title_sort effects of china's grassland contract policy on mongolian herders' attitudes towards grassland management in northeastern inner mongolia
publisher University of Arizona Libraries
series Journal of Political Ecology
issn 1073-0451
publishDate 2015-12-01
description China's Inner Mongolia Autonomous Region is experiencing high levels of grassland degradation partially as a result of government policies to sedentarize nomadic pastoralists and privatize collective grasslands. Previous research suggests that these policies have reduced Mongolian pastoralists' ability to effectively manage grasslands and cope with negative climatic events. Herders in New Barag Right Banner (n = 50) representing both sedentary and mobile livestock management strategies were asked to respond to a scaled survey regarding their attitudes towards the effectiveness of their current grassland management strategies and their perceptions regarding the future of pastoralism in Inner Mongolia. Inter-rater reliability and MannWhitney U Tests were utilized to compare the attitudes towards grassland management and the future viability of livestock production and to test whether or not sedentary and mobile herders share the same attitudes towards these facets of their pastoral way of life. There is both high intra and inter-group agreement on the survey variables across settlement categories, indicating that sedentary and mobile herders share the same attitudinal orientations regardless of their settlement patterns. The implications of these results for future grassland policy and sustainable livestock production are also discussed. Keywords: pastoralism, China, Inner Mongolia, grassland policy, privatization, marketization
url https://journals.uair.arizona.edu/index.php/JPE/article/view/21079
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