Hostname: page-component-78c5997874-j824f Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-10T09:44:44.676Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

The 2011 Protests in Inner Mongolia: An Ethno-environmental Perspective

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 February 2016

Nimrod Baranovitch*
Affiliation:
Department of Asian Studies, University of Haifa, Israel. Email: nbaranov@research.haifa.ac.il.

Abstract

In May 2011, Inner Mongolia experienced the most serious ethnic unrest in the region for 30 years. In this article, I explore the broader context that led to the eruption of the protests, with a particular emphasis on environmental issues. My aim is to explain why environmental issues occupied such a prominent position in the protests, and how these issues were connected to ethnicity. After discussing the material and practical implications of grassland degradation for Mongolian herders, I analyse the symbolic implications of this environmental crisis for the Mongolian educated elite, who have linked environmental issues to ethnic politics and identity. I argue that in the last 20 years or so, Mongolian intellectuals have developed a highly ethnicized environmental discourse, and that this discourse played an important role in informing the 2011 protests. My analysis focuses on this discourse as it is manifested in the domains of art, academia and daily discourse.

摘要

2011 年 5月内蒙古爆发近 30 年来最严重的民族抗议示威. 本文章分析引发这次骚动的重要原因, 尤其强调生态环境问题的影响. 文章解释环境问题在骚动中为什么占那么重要的位置, 并讨论环境问题和民族问题的关系. 在描述草原退化对蒙古族牧民的物质和实际影响以后, 我的主要焦点就是分析内蒙草原环境危机对蒙古族知识分子的象征性影响. 本文章提出蒙古族知识分子把环境问题, 民族政治和民族身份认同早已结合在一起. 笔者认为, 近 20 年来蒙古族知识分子制造了一种非常民族化的环境话语, 并这个话语在 2011 年的骚动中发挥了很重要的作用.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © The China Quarterly 2016 

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Baranovitch, Nimrod. 2001. “Between alterity and identity: new voices of minority people in China.” Modern China 27(3), 359401.Google Scholar
Baranovitch, Nimrod. 2009. “Compliance, autonomy, and resistance of a ‘state artist’: the case of Chinese Mongolian musician Teng Ge'er.” In Rees, Helen (ed.), Lives in Chinese Music. Urbana: University of Illinois Press, 173212.Google Scholar
BBC Zhongwen wang. 2011. “NeiMeng liang qian xuesheng kangyi mumin bei meiche nian si” (Two thousand Inner Mongolian students protest the death of a herder by a coal truck), 25 May, http://www.bbc.co.uk/zhongwen/simp/chinese_news/2011/05/110525_inner_mongolia_protest.shtml. Accessed 25 August 2014.Google Scholar
Bulag, Uradyn E. 2000. “Ethnic resistance with socialist characteristics.” In Perry, Elizabeth J. and Selden, Mark (eds.), Chinese Society: Change, Conflict and Resistance. London: Routledge, 178197.Google Scholar
Bulag, Uradyn E. 2004. “Inner Mongolia: the dialectics of colonization and ethnicity building.” In Rossabi, Morris (ed.), Governing China's Multiethnic Frontiers. Seattle: University of Washington Press, 84116.Google Scholar
Chen, Stephen. 2010. “Lama helps herdsmen with earthly knowledge,” South China Morning Post, 14 October.Google Scholar
Dalintai. 2003. “NeiMeng caoyuan feipingheng shengtai xitong he ‘weifeng zhuanyi’ suo dailai de wenti” (The problems brought by the non-equilibrium ecological system of Inner Mongolia's grasslands and the [policy of] “enclosing and sealing [of grazing land] and transfer [of herders]”), http://www.xzq.gov.cn/nm/news_view.asp?newsid=164. Accessed 14 January 2014.Google Scholar
Dickinson, Debbie, and Webber, Michael. 2007. “Environmental resettlement and development on the steppes of Inner Mongolia, PRC.” The Journal of Development Studies 43(3), 537561.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Futrell, W. Chad. 2007. “Choking on sand: regional cooperation to mitigate desertification in China.” China Environmental Series 9, 5763.Google Scholar
Ge, Jiangtao. 2010. “NeiMenggu yuyan, Wulagai zhi si” (An Inner Mongolian allegory, the death of Ulagai), Liaowang dongfang zhoukan, 24 May.Google Scholar
Greenpeace. 2013a. A Decade of Struggle: The Story of the Ordos Grassland. A Greenpeace booklet.Google Scholar
Greenpeace. 2013b. Thirsty Coal 2: Shenhua's Water Grab: An Investigation into the Over-extraction of Groundwater and Illegal Discharge of Wastewater by Shenhua Group's Coal-to-Liquid Demonstration Project in Ordos, Inner Mongolia. A Greenpeace booklet.Google Scholar
Haishan. 2007. “NeiMenggu muqu pinkunhua wenti ji fupin kaifa duice yanjiu” (A study of the problem of pauperization and the countermeasures of poverty alleviation and development in Inner Mongolia's pastoral regions). Zhongguo xumu zazhi 10, 4550.Google Scholar
Han, Enze. 2011a. “The dog that hasn't barked: assimilation and resistance in Inner Mongolia, China.” Asian Ethnicity 12(1), 5575.Google Scholar
Han, Enze. 2011b. “From domestic to international: the politics of ethnic identity in Xinjiang and Inner Mongolia.” Nationalities Papers: The Journal of Nationalism and Ethnicity 39(6), 941962.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Humphrey, Caroline, and Sneath, David. 1999. The End of Nomadism? Society, State and the Environment in Inner Asia. Durham, NC: Duke University Press.Google Scholar
Jacobs, Andrew. 2011a. “Anger over protesters’ deaths leads to intensified demonstrations by Mongolians,” The New York Times, 30 May.Google Scholar
Jacobs, Andrew. 2011b. “Ethnic protests in China have lengthy roots,” The New York Times, 10 June.Google Scholar
Jankowiak, William R. 1988. “The last hurrah? Political protest in Inner Mongolia.” The Australian Journal of Chinese Affairs 19/20, 269288.Google Scholar
Jankowiak, William R. 1993. Sex, Death and Hierarchy in a Chinese City: An Anthropological Account. New York: Columbia University Press.Google Scholar
Khan, Almaz. 1996. “Who are the Mongols? State, ethnicity, and the politics of representation in the PRC.” In Brown, Melissa J. (ed.), Negotiating Ethnicities in China and Taiwan. Berkeley: Institute of East Asian Studies, University of California, 125159.Google Scholar
Li, Wenjun, Ali, Saleem H. and Zhang, Qian. 2007. “Property rights and grassland degradation: a study of the Xilingol pasture, Inner Mongolia, China.” Journal of Environmental Management 85, 461470.Google Scholar
Li, Wenjun, and Huntsinger, Lynn. 2011. “China's grassland contract policy and its impacts on herder ability to benefit in Inner Mongolia: tragic feedbacks.” Ecology and Society 16(2), 114.Google Scholar
Li, Xiaoshu. 2010. “How green were my pastures,” Global Times, 16 June.Google Scholar
Longworth, John W., and Williamson, Gregory J.. 1993. China's Pastoral Region: Sheep and Wool, Minority Nationalities, Rangeland Degradation and Sustainable Development. Wallingford, Oxfordshire: CAB International.Google Scholar
Martin, Dan. 2011. “China vows to address Mongol grievances,” AFP, 31 May, http://ph.news.yahoo.com/china-address-mongol-demands-state-media-034942057.html. Accessed 12 November 2014.Google Scholar
Meyer, Natalie. 2006. “Desertification and restoration of grasslands in Inner Mongolia.” Journal of Forestry 104, 328331.Google Scholar
RFA (Radio Free Asia). 2011. “Mongolian protests spread: thousands in northern China march to government buildings,” 26 May, http://www.rfa.org/english/news/china/protests-05262011133210.html. Accessed 30 October 2013.Google Scholar
Sneath, David. 2000. Changing Inner Mongolia: Pastoral Mongolian Society and the Chinese State. Oxford: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
The Economist. 2012. “Little Hu and the mining of the grassland,” 14 July.Google Scholar
Togochog, Enghebatu. 2006. “Ecological migration and human rights.” China Rights Forum 4, 2630.Google Scholar
Wang, Hui. 2011a. “Xianxing muqu zhengce qidai gaibian” (The current policies in the pastoral regions await change), Kexue shibao, 19 August.Google Scholar
Wang, Hui. 2011b. “Yao mei haishi yao caoyuan: NeiMenggu tudi que quan xian jiongjing” (Coal or grassland: the validation of land rights in Inner Mongolia is trapped in a predicament), Kexue shibao, 15 July.Google Scholar
Watts, Jonathan. 2011. “Inner Mongolia protests prompt crackdown,” The Guardian, 30 May.Google Scholar
Williams, Dee Mack. 1996. “The barbed walls of China: a contemporary grassland drama.” The Journal of Asian Studies 55(3), 665691.Google Scholar
Williams, Dee Mack. 2002. Beyond Great Walls: Environment, Identity, and Development on the Chinese Grasslands of Inner Mongolia. Stanford: Stanford University Press.Google Scholar
Woodworth, Max D. 2011. “Frontier boomtown urbanism in Ordos, Inner Mongolia Autonomous Region.” Cross-Currents: East Asian History and Culture Review 1, 126, http://cross-currents.berkeley.edu. Accessed 16 December 2014.Google Scholar
Xun, Lili, and Bao, Zhiming. 2008. “Government, market and households in the ecological relocation process: a sociological analysis of ecological relocation in S Banner.” Social Sciences in China 29(1), 113128.Google Scholar
Yan, Jianbiao. 2012. “Bei meikuang gaibian” (Changed by the coal mines), Shijue, 6 November, 5279.Google Scholar
Yang, Xiaohong. 2010. “‘Lang tuteng’ guyuan shang: Zhongguo zui mei caoyuan bian shamo” (The premature death of the old home of Wolf Totem: China's most beautiful grassland turns into desert), Renmin wang, 7 July, http://news.china.com.cn//rollnews/2010-07/07/content_3086188.htm. Accessed 22 November 2013.Google Scholar
Yeh, Emily T. 2005. “Green governmentality and pastoralism in western China: ‘converting pastures to grasslands’.” Nomadic Peoples 9(1–2), 930.Google Scholar
Zhang, MunkhDalai A., Borjigin, Elles and Zhang, Huiping. 2007. “Mongolian nomadic culture and ecological culture: on the ecological reconstruction in the agro-pastoral mosaic zone in northern China.” Ecological Economics 62, 1926.Google Scholar