🎉 New to MixCache.com? Sign up now and get $5.00 FREE CREDIT towards any ebook purchase!* Create Account →

Environmental Histories of China’s Provinces MTA
Climate, land use, and ecological change through provincial chapters

Book Details
0 ratings
Log in to purchase and rate this book.
About this book:

Environmental Histories of China’s Provinces # Environmental Histories of China’s Provinces

This book presents a comprehensive and comparative analysis of China’s environmental history through the lens of its provincial-level administrative units. By examining each province as an ecological entity, it traces the evolution of landscapes shaped by climate variability, land-use changes, and institutional policies, revealing both shared national trajectories and distinct regional transformations. The text explores themes such as water management, deforestation, agricultural intensification, and the impacts of industrialization, while emphasizing the interconnectedness of natural and human systems across different geographic and climatic contexts. From the semi-arid north to the tropical south, and from mountainous terrain to coastal deltas, the study illustrates how provinces like Beijing, Hebei, Shanxi, Inner Mongolia, Liaoning, and others have navigated environmental challenges and adapted their governance strategies over time.

Each chapter follows a standardized structure, analyzing physical settings, historical land use, ecological hazards, and contemporary sustainability issues, enabling cross-provincial comparisons. The work highlights the tension between economic growth and environmental protection, as seen in the coal-dependent landscapes of Hebei and Shanxi, the grassland degradation of Inner Mongolia, and the wetland losses in Jiangxi and Hubei. It also underscores the role of policy interventions such as the "Green Great Wall," "Grain-for-Green," and ecological compensation schemes in addressing land degradation, while acknowledging the limitations of top-down approaches in achieving sustainable outcomes. The book emphasizes the importance of nature-based solutions and adaptive governance in confronting climate change and resource scarcity.

The environmental narratives span from ancient practices like terrace farming in Zhejiang and oasis irrigation in Gansu to modern challenges such as urban heat islands in Shanghai, pollution in industrial areas, and the impacts of hydropower dams on riverine ecosystems in Sichuan and Yunnan. Coastal provinces face threats from sea-level rise, typhoons, and marine degradation, while inland regions grapple with desertification, mining legacies, and biodiversity loss. The study also addresses the socio-economic dimensions of environmental change, including the displacement of pastoralists in Inner Mongolia, the decline of traditional industries in Liaoning, and the struggle for sustainable development in resource-rich but ecologically fragile areas like Xinjiang and Guizhou.

The book concludes by stressing the need for provincial-scale historical insights to inform resilient and contextually appropriate environmental policies. It advocates for integrating traditional ecological knowledge, strengthening cross-boundary cooperation, and aligning conservation with sustainable economic models to address the legacy of environmental degradation while preparing for future uncertainties. By situating contemporary challenges within deep ecological timeframes, the authors aim to equip policymakers with lessons to navigate tradeoffs, avoid past pitfalls, and foster a balance between human development and ecological preservation in China’s rapidly changing environmental landscape.

What You'll Find Inside:
  • Provincial-scale analysis of water management policies revealing how river diversions, reservoir construction, and groundwater extraction have reshaped regional ecologies from the North China Plain to eastern seaboard deltas
  • Examination of China's forest frontier dynamics including logging cycles, reforestation campaigns like Grain-for-Green, and ecological compensation across diverse regions from Loess Plateau to tropical forests
  • Tracing of agrarian transformation through provincial case studies showing how terrace-building, crop rotations, cash crop expansion, and peri-urban intensification reshape land use and labor patterns
  • Analysis of environmental hazards (drought, flood, landslide, dust storm, typhoon) as lenses for understanding provincial environmental governance and social resilience strategies
  • Comparative framework revealing path dependence, policy unintended consequences, and successful adaptation by contrasting cases like steppe grassland governance with montane biodiversity stewardship
Who's It For:

This book is designed for environmental historians, policymakers, and planners working on China's environmental challenges. It will particularly benefit those seeking comparative insights for climate adaptation strategies, sustainable development planning, and understanding the historical roots of contemporary ecological issues across China's diverse provincial landscapes. Researchers interested in human-environment interactions, water resource management, and the socio-political dimensions of environmental change will find the provincial case studies and cross-cutting themes valuable for their work.

Author:

Harold Baker

Published By:

MixCache.com


Date Published:

June 14, 2026

Word Count:

50,177 words

Reading Time:

3 hours 31 minutes

Sample:

Read Sample


🎁 Includes the ebook FREE
Read instantly while you wait for your paperback to arrive — no extra charge.
🚚 FREE Shipping in the USA
$7 flat rate per book to all other countries
Order:

Click to order this paperback:

Buy Now
Ebook included · Print made to order Secure Payment

Print copy is made to order and ships worldwide. Includes the ebook free, ready to read instantly.


$5 account credit for all new MixCache.com accounts, usable toward any ebook purchase!*

Ratings & Reviews

0 ratings