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The Local Environmental State in China: A Study of County-Level Cities in Suzhou*

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  01 April 2011

Yu-wai Li
Affiliation:
Balsillie School of International Affairs (Canada).
Bo Miao
Affiliation:
City University of Hong Kong.
Graeme Lang
Affiliation:
City University of Hong Kong. Email: graeme.lang@cityu.edu.hk (corresponding author).

Abstract

Local administration in China remains a contested territory of environmental governance. Economic growth often comes with high environmental cost; the central government's environmental regulations are implemented unevenly. This article examines the experience of policy uptake and adoption of the National Model City of Environmental Protection programme in the county-level cities of the Suzhou Municipality. It analyses the rationales for these cities' adoption of the policy, and implications for the emergence of the “environmental state” in local China. It suggests that while economic development remains an important priority of local officials, this preference is not immutable and is now complemented in some areas by substantial local commitments to environmental good practice, often under the influence of local leaders as well as provincial authorities.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © The China Quarterly 2011

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15 Our request to hold interviews with EPB officials in Wujiang was turned down since they were in the midst of MEP re-examination of their model city status. Information about Wujiang was obtained from interviews with officials from Suzhou and the provincial EPBs and, where possible, cross-checked with secondary sources.

16 Other programmes include National Garden City (Guojia yuanlin chengshi) under the Ministry of Construction, National Sanitary City (Guojia weisheng chengshi) under the Ministry of Health, and most recently, National Ecological City (Guojia shengtai chengshi) under the MEP.

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