New evidence on China's intent behind its approach to the Sino-Burmese territorial dispute, 1954-1960
In: IDSA occasional paper no. 44
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In: IDSA occasional paper no. 44
In: Environmental science and pollution research: ESPR, Volume 30, Issue 55, p. 117302-117324
ISSN: 1614-7499
In: Social behavior and personality: an international journal, Volume 50, Issue 11, p. 1-13
ISSN: 1179-6391
I explored the relationship between students' perception of blended learning and their engagement and satisfaction with the course. I used structural equation modeling to analyze the survey responses of 270 tourism management students from two universities in China. The findings indicated
that emotional engagement and perceived usefulness influenced students' satisfaction with blended learning. Perceived usefulness had a stronger direct influence on cognitive engagement in student blended learning than did perceived interaction, whereas neither perceived playfulness nor ease
of use had a significant influence on cognitive engagement. Emotional engagement significantly affected course satisfaction but cognitive engagement had a nonsignificant influence on course satisfaction. Finally, perceived usefulness affected satisfaction indirectly through emotional engagement.
The implications of the findings for teaching practice are discussed and limitations and future research directions are suggested.
In: Women's studies: an interdisciplinary journal, Volume 51, Issue 3, p. 307-321
ISSN: 1547-7045
In: Women's studies: an interdisciplinary journal, Volume 49, Issue 5, p. 463-477
ISSN: 1547-7045
In: Journal of political ecology: JPE ; case studies in history and society, Volume 25, Issue 1
ISSN: 1073-0451
This study uses concepts of power and 'scaled politics' to analyze the effects of environmentalization and technocratic and market-based measures in China. Political scientists have explored the politics behind the proactive engagement of the Chinese state in governing the environment since the 2000s, also drawing on political ecology. Based on policy document analysis and ethnographic fieldwork, the study investigates a case of ecological resettlement in Inner Mongolia by examining how this became a new solution to desertification and rangeland degradation. The article shows how resettlement was implemented through multi-scalar practices and the reconfiguration of spatial relations, and why pastoral households responded to resettlement in certain ways. The state turned certain areas and people (associated with overgrazing) into subjects of governance. By distinguishing the different strategies used by central and local government, the analysis shows that disciplinary and neoliberal environmentality are associated with scalar practices between the state and the people, and within the state system. Neoliberal environmentality, however, counteracts the making of environmental subjects and encounters resistance. Sovereign environmentality is still deployed as a means to control local government and the obedience of herders. Pastoralists resist this, depending on their different subjectivities. The study advances our understanding of the multiple governmentality perspective, its analytics, and scalar processes.
This study uses concepts of power and 'scaled politics' to analyze the effects of environmentalization and technocratic and market-based measures in China. Political scientists have explored the politics behind the proactive engagement of the Chinese state in governing the environment since the 2000s, also drawing on political ecology. Based on policy document analysis and ethnographic fieldwork, the study investigates a case of ecological resettlement in Inner Mongolia by examining how this became a new solution to desertification and rangeland degradation. The article shows how resettlement was implemented through multi-scalar practices and the reconfiguration of spatial relations, and why pastoral households responded to resettlement in certain ways. The state turned certain areas and people (associated with overgrazing) into subjects of governance. By distinguishing the different strategies used by central and local government, the analysis shows that disciplinary and neoliberal environmentality are associated with scalar practices between the state and the people, and within the state system. Neoliberal environmentality, however, counteracts the making of environmental subjects and encounters resistance. Sovereign environmentality is still deployed as a means to control local government and the obedience of herders. Pastoralists resist this, depending on their different subjectivities. The study advances our understanding of the multiple governmentality perspective, its analytics, and scalar processes.
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China's quest for sustainable development has given birth to a set of contested 'ecological construction' programmes. Focusing on 'ecological resettlement', a type of policy measure in a programme for restoring degraded grasslands, this thesis sets out a critical analysis in opposition to the dominant technical and managerial approaches to understanding environmentalisation. The aim is to draw out the politics of the formulation, implementation and effects of ecological resettlement at and across different scales. The study combines fieldwork, interviews, analysis of policy documents, and statistical analysis while theoretically, in addition to political ecology, it incorporates concepts and models from environmental governance, migration, and pastoralism studies. Environmentalisation is examined through three types of analysis: environmentalisation of the state, reshaping of state-society relations, and (re)territorialisation. A central theme is how local processes are linked to national considerations and how the local state acts as an intermediary between the central state and the pastoralists. The analysis exposes the practices that enabled the central state to define the problem of grasslands and devise interventions, illustrating the environmentalisation of the state. However, at the local level, incentives and interests defined by the political structure drove the developmental local state to pursue short-term-effective rather than sustainable practices. On the other hand, while the pastoral households responded to the projects with different strategies, their migration decisions suggested that social, economic and cultural considerations played a more important role than environmental concerns. Moreover, ecological resettlement has led to a significant change of Mongolian pastoralism. Land-tenure-based management further fragmented rangelands while the emergence of new social arrangements enabled migrant households to remain involved with pastoralism.
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In: Social Networking: SN, Volume 3, Issue 4, p. 203-210
ISSN: 2169-3323
In: Hommes & migrations: première revue française des questions d'immigration, Issue 1284, p. 42-55
ISSN: 2262-3353
SSRN
In: The journal of development studies, Volume 59, Issue 4, p. 613-614
ISSN: 1743-9140
In: Land use policy: the international journal covering all aspects of land use, Volume 78, p. 447-459
ISSN: 0264-8377
In: The China journal: Zhongguo-yanjiu, Volume 78, p. 189-191
ISSN: 1835-8535
Rene Trappel's book is an ambitious attempt to address some of the key issues in thecomplex process of agrarian transition unfolding in China today. Trappel favors the"commodification of farmland" – the transfer of the land rights of small-scale farmers,especially to large-scale agribusiness producers – as a necessary condition for agrariantransition. He selects this as the dependent variable for his investigation and equates thiswith 'agrarian transition'. He collected information from four counties (one each in Sichuanand Shandong and two in Guizhou) through three field trips between 2008 and 2010.
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