Rural Resiliency: Sources of Sustainability in the Chinese Countryside

Rural China, where approximately 800 million citizens live, is experiencing a set of challenges similar to rural areas in other countries. Worldwide, although rural regions are the main sources of natural resources and human capital that feed the economic growth of urban-industrial cores, these regi...

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Main Author: Mark Dailey
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Open Library of Humanities 2009-10-01
Series:The ASIANetwork Exchange: A Journal for Asian Studies in the Liberal Arts
Online Access:http://www.asianetworkexchange.org/articles/216
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spelling doaj-ed5ab0730c134c38adef0f7a16e97dae2020-11-25T00:59:06ZengOpen Library of HumanitiesThe ASIANetwork Exchange: A Journal for Asian Studies in the Liberal Arts1943-99381943-99462009-10-01171799610.16995/ane.216117Rural Resiliency: Sources of Sustainability in the Chinese CountrysideMark Dailey0Green Mountain CollegeRural China, where approximately 800 million citizens live, is experiencing a set of challenges similar to rural areas in other countries. Worldwide, although rural regions are the main sources of natural resources and human capital that feed the economic growth of urban-industrial cores, these regions at the headwaters of globalization are comparatively overexploited, underdeveloped, undervalued, and underappreciated. China’s rural-urban relationship deserves special attention, though, because of the uniqueness of some features of its current transformations, and the speed and volume with which they are occurring. In the following essay, I draw on environmental anthropology, human ecology, and resiliency theory to examine these transformations and challenges, and to propose a fundamental thesis: that China’s rural regions are sites of critically important (1) cultural and biological diversities and (2) embedded and comparatively durable knowledge and practices that are critical to the resiliency of rural systems in particular and, by extension, Chinese society as a whole.http://www.asianetworkexchange.org/articles/216
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Mark Dailey
spellingShingle Mark Dailey
Rural Resiliency: Sources of Sustainability in the Chinese Countryside
The ASIANetwork Exchange: A Journal for Asian Studies in the Liberal Arts
author_facet Mark Dailey
author_sort Mark Dailey
title Rural Resiliency: Sources of Sustainability in the Chinese Countryside
title_short Rural Resiliency: Sources of Sustainability in the Chinese Countryside
title_full Rural Resiliency: Sources of Sustainability in the Chinese Countryside
title_fullStr Rural Resiliency: Sources of Sustainability in the Chinese Countryside
title_full_unstemmed Rural Resiliency: Sources of Sustainability in the Chinese Countryside
title_sort rural resiliency: sources of sustainability in the chinese countryside
publisher Open Library of Humanities
series The ASIANetwork Exchange: A Journal for Asian Studies in the Liberal Arts
issn 1943-9938
1943-9946
publishDate 2009-10-01
description Rural China, where approximately 800 million citizens live, is experiencing a set of challenges similar to rural areas in other countries. Worldwide, although rural regions are the main sources of natural resources and human capital that feed the economic growth of urban-industrial cores, these regions at the headwaters of globalization are comparatively overexploited, underdeveloped, undervalued, and underappreciated. China’s rural-urban relationship deserves special attention, though, because of the uniqueness of some features of its current transformations, and the speed and volume with which they are occurring. In the following essay, I draw on environmental anthropology, human ecology, and resiliency theory to examine these transformations and challenges, and to propose a fundamental thesis: that China’s rural regions are sites of critically important (1) cultural and biological diversities and (2) embedded and comparatively durable knowledge and practices that are critical to the resiliency of rural systems in particular and, by extension, Chinese society as a whole.
url http://www.asianetworkexchange.org/articles/216
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