Achieving ecological restoration by working with local people: a Chinese scholar seeks win-win paths

Environmental degradation and poverty are linked, and this means that conservation and poverty reduction must be tackled together. However, finding a successful integrated strategy has been an elusive goal. We describe the career of a Chinese scholar, Shixiong Cao, whose persistent efforts to find a...

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Main Authors: Heran Zheng, Guosheng Wang
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Resilience Alliance 2014-09-01
Series:Ecology and Society
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.ecologyandsociety.org/vol19/iss3/art35/
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spelling doaj-44ed8f62c81045db892c62d6264125b22020-11-24T22:01:48ZengResilience AllianceEcology and Society1708-30872014-09-011933510.5751/ES-06995-1903356995Achieving ecological restoration by working with local people: a Chinese scholar seeks win-win pathsHeran Zheng0Guosheng Wang1College of Economic Management, Beijing Forestry UniversityChina Law SocietyEnvironmental degradation and poverty are linked, and this means that conservation and poverty reduction must be tackled together. However, finding a successful integrated strategy has been an elusive goal. We describe the career of a Chinese scholar, Shixiong Cao, whose persistent efforts to find and follow win-win paths have led to ecological restoration accompanied by long-term benefits for local residents. Cao's story illustrates how development that combines environmental and economic perspectives can both help people to escape the poverty trap and restore degraded environments. His experience demonstrates that when environmental managers find solutions that can mitigate or eliminate poverty through the development of green enterprises, they can combine them with environmental restoration efforts to produce long-term sustainable solutions. In this paper, we share Cao's 28 years of experience because we believe that his scientific and practical spirit, and his belief that it is necessary to work directly with the people affected by environmental projects, will inspire other scholars and practitioners to achieve similar successes.http://www.ecologyandsociety.org/vol19/iss3/art35/environmental conservationenvironmental policypoverty trapscientific philosophysocioeconomic development
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Heran Zheng
Guosheng Wang
spellingShingle Heran Zheng
Guosheng Wang
Achieving ecological restoration by working with local people: a Chinese scholar seeks win-win paths
Ecology and Society
environmental conservation
environmental policy
poverty trap
scientific philosophy
socioeconomic development
author_facet Heran Zheng
Guosheng Wang
author_sort Heran Zheng
title Achieving ecological restoration by working with local people: a Chinese scholar seeks win-win paths
title_short Achieving ecological restoration by working with local people: a Chinese scholar seeks win-win paths
title_full Achieving ecological restoration by working with local people: a Chinese scholar seeks win-win paths
title_fullStr Achieving ecological restoration by working with local people: a Chinese scholar seeks win-win paths
title_full_unstemmed Achieving ecological restoration by working with local people: a Chinese scholar seeks win-win paths
title_sort achieving ecological restoration by working with local people: a chinese scholar seeks win-win paths
publisher Resilience Alliance
series Ecology and Society
issn 1708-3087
publishDate 2014-09-01
description Environmental degradation and poverty are linked, and this means that conservation and poverty reduction must be tackled together. However, finding a successful integrated strategy has been an elusive goal. We describe the career of a Chinese scholar, Shixiong Cao, whose persistent efforts to find and follow win-win paths have led to ecological restoration accompanied by long-term benefits for local residents. Cao's story illustrates how development that combines environmental and economic perspectives can both help people to escape the poverty trap and restore degraded environments. His experience demonstrates that when environmental managers find solutions that can mitigate or eliminate poverty through the development of green enterprises, they can combine them with environmental restoration efforts to produce long-term sustainable solutions. In this paper, we share Cao's 28 years of experience because we believe that his scientific and practical spirit, and his belief that it is necessary to work directly with the people affected by environmental projects, will inspire other scholars and practitioners to achieve similar successes.
topic environmental conservation
environmental policy
poverty trap
scientific philosophy
socioeconomic development
url http://www.ecologyandsociety.org/vol19/iss3/art35/
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