China's Water Warriors: Citizen Action and Policy Change

China's Water Warriors: Citizen Action and Policy Change

by Andrew Mertha
China's Water Warriors: Citizen Action and Policy Change

China's Water Warriors: Citizen Action and Policy Change

by Andrew Mertha

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Overview

Today opponents of large-scale dam projects in China, rather than being greeted with indifference or repression, are part of the hydropower policymaking process itself. What accounts for this dramatic change in this critical policy area surrounding China's insatiable quest for energy? In China's Water Warriors, Andrew C. Mertha argues that as China has become increasingly market driven, decentralized, and politically heterogeneous, the control and management of water has transformed from an unquestioned economic imperative to a lightning rod of bureaucratic infighting, societal opposition, and open protest.

Although bargaining has always been present in Chinese politics, more recently the media, nongovernmental organizations, and other activists—actors hitherto denied a seat at the table—have emerged as serious players in the policy-making process. Drawing from extensive field research in some of the most remote parts of Southwest China, China's Water Warriors contains rich narratives of the widespread opposition to dams in Pubugou and Dujiangyan in Sichuan province and the Nu River Project in Yunnan province.

Mertha concludes that the impact and occasional success of such grassroots movements and policy activism signal a marked change in China's domestic politics. He questions democratization as the only, or even the most illuminating, indicator of political liberalization in China, instead offering an informed and hopeful picture of a growing pluralization of the Chinese policy process as exemplified by hydropower politics.

For the 2010 paperback edition, Mertha tests his conclusions against events in China since 2008, including the Olympics, the devastating 2008 Wenchuan earthquake, and the Uighar and Tibetan protests of 2008 and 2009.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780801462177
Publisher: Cornell University Press
Publication date: 11/15/2014
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 192
File size: 2 MB
Age Range: 18 Years

About the Author

Andrew C. Mertha is Associate Professor of Chinese Politics at Cornell University. He is the author of The Politics of Piracy: Intellectual Property in Contemporary China, also from Cornell.

Table of Contents

Preface1 China's Hydraulic Society?
2 Actors, Interests, and Issues at Stake
3 From Policy Confl ict to Political Showdown: The Failure at Pubugou
4 From Economic Development to Cultural Heritage: Expanding the Sphere at Dujiangyan
5 The Nu River Project and the Middle Ground of Political Pluralization
6 A Kinder, Gentler "Fragmented Authoritarianism"?Index

What People are Saying About This

Tim Oakes

While China has roared ahead with water control and hydropower megaprojects, Western scholarship has been slow to update its stubborn paradigms. This book takes a big step in bringing theory more in line with the complex realities of political pluralism and protest found in China today.

Kevin J. O'Brien

Andrew C. Mertha proves that sometimes it's best to approach a topic from the side. To provide the freshest interpretation of Chinese bureaucratic politics in years, he investigates controversies surrounding dam-building. To cast light on state-society relations and the pluralization of Chinese society, he starts with the state. Nearly every page contains something new about issues as different as democratization, protest, and the policy process. Readers will be grappling with Mertha's findings on policy entrepreneurship and issue framing for as long as Chinese leaders are making policies.

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