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|a Beyond Ideologies |h [electronic resource] |b China’s Experience in Confronting the Global Environmental Crisis. |
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|i Added title page title: |a China Debate 2017: Beyond Ideologies. |
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|a London : |b SOAS University of London, |c 2017. |
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|a Video records the event of 11 May 2017 |
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|a [cc by-nc] This item is licensed with the Creative Commons Attribution, Non-Commercial License. This license lets others remix, tweak, and build upon this work non-commercially, as long as they credit the author and license their new creations under the identical terms. |
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|a The second largest economy and ‘the factory of the world’ China occupies a pivotal place in the global efforts to confront the environmental challenges. This takes on new currency as the current president of largest economy and the world’s only remaining superpower, Donald Trump, is sceptical of climate change and unwilling to take a leading role in the search for solutions. If all eyes are not yet on China, they may well do in the coming few years. -- China probably suffers more from environmental challenges than any other country at the moment. Just step off an aeroplane in any major Chinese city on a winter’s day and one gets a sense of the magnitude of the problem. The scale and intensity of the challenges are now widely recognized, and its government and people are focused on the need to confront them. It is therefore no wonder that China is not only the largest consumer of fossil fuel and emitter of greenhouse gases but also a leading investor in and producer of sustainable energy. China’s case highlights starkly the dilemma between choosing fast development and growth on the one hand and sustainability on the other. What has happened in China is not exceptional in an important sense. In general terms Europe, North America and Japan went through the same path decades ago. India is closely following China’s footsteps, and other countries that seek to catch up in development are next in line. We now know this path is not sustainable. A better alternative must be found. It can only be found if countries of different ideological persuasion, political system and stage of development leave their differences behind and work pragmatically together. -- Focusing on China’s experience and approach, this debate seeks to use the case of China to enable us reflect on what the key issues are in confronting environment challenges, hopefully in a more pre-emptive way. No doubt some of the issues that apply in China are specific but most are common problems that any government striving to end poverty of its people through rapid development needs to confront. By discussing and debating the case of China, wider lessons can be drawn as the world looks to make sustainable development a reality rather than tolerate it as an oxymoron. -- Panellists include Moderator, Isabel Hilton (Chinadialogue), Tom Burke (Co-founding Director and Chairman, E3G London Office), Pransenjit Duara (Oscar Tang Chair of East Asian Studies, Duke University), Shuo Li (Greenpeace, Beijing), and Jennifer Turner (Director, China Environment Forum at the Woodrow Wilson Center) |
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|a Electronic reproduction. |b London : |c SOAS University of London, |c SOAS, University of London, |d 2017. |f (SOAS Digital Collections) |n Mode of access: World Wide Web. |n System requirements: Internet connectivity; Web browser software. |
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|a SOAS, University of London. |
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|a Climatic changes |x Economic aspects. |
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|a Climatic changes |x Government policy. |
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|a SOAS University of London. China Institute. |
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|a SOAS Digital Collections. |
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|a SOAS China Institute resources. |
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|a GBR |b SDC |c China Collection |
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|u http://digital.soas.ac.uk/AA00000458/00001 |y Electronic Resource |
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|a http://digital.soas.ac.uk/content/AA/00/00/04/58/00001/AA00000458thm.jpg |