Abstract

The Chinese authorities have formulated a vision for the global future that it terms ‘ecological civilization’ (shengtai wenming 生态文明). It was introduced into Communist Party ideology in 2007 and endorsed by Xi Jinping in 2013 as a major framework for the country’s environmental policies. During the 2000s, the government set in motion many stricter environmental regulations and targets in line with this vision, including opening up some new room for bottom-up, volunteer-driven initiatives mostly on waste collection, recycling, education, and sustainable agriculture. At the same time, it calls for more participation of women in environmental governance at grassroots levels. Surveys in different parts of the world, including China, have suggested that women tend to be more concerned with environmental issues than men, but we have few qualitative studies in China of this topic. This article details three case studies in which women have initiated environmental projects in their local communities. They have mobilized other women (and some men) to engage in collective action, and they have generated financial and symbolic resources for their projects. We analyse these cases and argue that by raising the status of environmental issues such as waste collection and recycling, previously often downplayed as “women’s affairs”, China’s environmental turn has helped expand the space available for female subjectivities and participation in public activities. However, this expanding role has not translated into better representation or participation of women at higher levels of political authority beyond the village level, and the emerging female environmental subjectivities remain firmly based in existing political hierarchies and male-dominated structures.

Highlights

  • In the fall of 2019, one of China’s few elected female village heads took us on a victory lap through a village that had been transformed into a model “pollution-free village”

  • Relating to debates about political participation and female agency (Phạm 2013; Burke 2012), we show in this article how the official gender ideology of the Communist Party, in combination with the much more recent emphasis on the implementation of environmental policies, may help to create room for women to initiate and engage in—sometimes take leadership of—local environmental projects

  • We have provided examples of how women at the grassroots level in rural and urban areas of China have taken steps to initiate or engage in environmental activities

Read more

Summary

Introduction

In the fall of 2019, one of China’s few elected female village heads (cunzhang 村长) took us on a victory lap through a village that had been transformed into a model “pollution-free village” (ling wuran cun 零污染村). The cases discussed in the following constitute examples of how women initiate new and creative bottom-up environmental projects that are able to generate symbolic, financial, and political support They show that when projects become so successful that higher levels of government wish to scale them up, the women in charge come to serve, first of all, as valuable political symbols of successful rural model female citizens. Relating to debates about political participation and female agency (Phạm 2013; Burke 2012), we show in this article how the official gender ideology of the Communist Party, in combination with the much more recent emphasis on the implementation of environmental policies, may help to create room for women to initiate and engage in—sometimes take leadership of—local environmental projects. We explore the possibilities woman have for initiating and leading environmental activities and projects, and we discuss the limitations they encounter

Fieldwork
Case 1
Case 2
Case 3
Findings
Conclusions
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call