Abstract

Societal relations in rural areas have entered into a new stage of adjustment over the past decade. However, the adjustment, which might bring about profound societal changes in countryside as well as in China as a whole, have not been paid much attention and very few studies have been conducted from the perspective of ecological resource crises. We use the case of a village as an example to show how water pollution, as one of the contributory factors, possibly affect the transition of clans and societal changes in Chinese villages. Through observation and interviews, we find that there is an apparent rise of “New Clanism” within clans, which gradually abandons the tradition of supremacy of clan interests and places family or individual interests at top priority. We also find that clan boundaries get increasingly obscure since the integrity of clans is undermined by the rise of new interest groups across clans, but the boundaries remain relatively clear due to the consistency (albeit incomplete) of clan interests. Some new clan élites and representatives of new interest groups get involved in village governance, which indicates that their goals have shifted from natural resources to social or political capital. The significance of our findings is that they provide not only a unique perspective for the interaction between society and resources, but also some new ideas for the future study of rural China at the environment-social interface.

Highlights

  • Clans in the rural areas of China, with their members living in same areas and sharing similar resources, are social organizations based on ties of consanguinity and geography

  • The orders and rules followed by the clans are one of the most important informal systems in rural China

  • The ecological resource crises refer to the imbalance of the structures and functions of the local and even the global resource system caused by the excessive production and living activities of human beings

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Summary

Introduction

Clans in the rural areas of China, with their members living in same areas and sharing similar resources, are social organizations based on ties of consanguinity and geography. Clan members usually share similar social capital and natural resources and form basically unanimous interest groups. Clans are experiencing great changes with the transition of China’s society. Despite the progress, knowledge of the causes and results of the transitions remains limited, especially in relation to ecological resource crises as possible factors that lead to clan transitions. The ecological resource crises refer to the imbalance of the structures and functions of the local and even the global resource system caused by the excessive production and living activities of human beings. The crises are limited to the shortage of natural resources, but related to the decline of environment and resources, thereby affecting the sustainable development of society

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