Cornell University
Library
Cornell UniversityLibrary

eCommons

Help
Log In(current)
  1. Home
  2. Cornell Centers, Laboratories, Institutes, Projects and Programs
  3. Mario Einaudi Center for International Studies
  4. East Asia Program (EAP)
  5. Cornell Contemporary China Initiative Lecture Series
  6. Natural Infrastructure in China’s Era of Ecological Civilization

Natural Infrastructure in China’s Era of Ecological Civilization

File(s)
natural_infrastructure_in_china’s_era_of_ecological_civilization (1080p).mp4 (1.59 GB)
EMILY YEH.srt (123.24 KB)
Permanent Link(s)
https://hdl.handle.net/1813/111832
Collections
Cornell Contemporary China Initiative Lecture Series
Author
Yeh, Emily
Abstract

Speaker: Emily T. Yeh is Professor of Geography at the University of Colorado Boulder

Abstract: Although infrastructure is conventionally thought of in reference to human-designed systems such as railroads, pipelines, tunnels, and ports, landscapes, and nature itself are also increasingly being understood as infrastructure through terms such as “natural infrastructure” and “green infrastructure,” which tend to focus on the concept of ecosystem services. Taking an infrastructural lens onto natural infrastructure projects in the context of Xi Jinping’s call for ecological civilization, this paper argues that new calculative tools obscure the profoundly political nature of ecological red lines and ecological functional zones, which effectively enframe China’s national territory as an object of optimization. The paper then explores a specific aspect of the project of ecological civilization: campaigns to dismantle and destroy infrastructure deemed to be in violation of environmental regulations. I theorize this as a form of “destructive production” of natural infrastructure and provide two case studies of the dismantling of scenic areas not long after their reconstruction following the Wenchuan Earthquake in Sichuan.

Bio: Emily T. Yeh is Professor of Geography at the University of Colorado Boulder, USA. She is the author of Taming Tibet: Landscape Transformation and the Gift of Chinese Development, and co-editor of Mapping Shangrila: Contested Landscapes in the Sino-Tibetan Borderlands, and Rural Politics in Contemporary China.

Description
Video of full lecture with presentation slides edited into the video.
Sponsorship
Cornell East Asia Program, co-sponsored by Cornell Department of Global Development, and The Polson Institute for Global Development.
Faculty host: John (Jack) Zinda, Developmental Sociology.
Date Issued
2021-10-19
Publisher
East Asia Program, Cornell University
Keywords
East Asia
•
China
•
Environment
•
Ecology
•
Infrastructure
Related Version
https://vimeo.com/473211879
Rights
Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International
Rights URI
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/
Type
video/moving image
Accessibility Feature
captions
Accessibility Summary
Closed captions available

Site Statistics | Help

About eCommons | Policies | Terms of use | Contact Us

copyright © 2002-2026 Cornell University Library | Privacy | Web Accessibility Assistance