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Toward sustainable river basin manag...
~
Chen, Ke.
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Toward sustainable river basin management in China: The challenge of institutional reform and capacity building.
Record Type:
Electronic resources : Monograph/item
Title/Author:
Toward sustainable river basin management in China: The challenge of institutional reform and capacity building./
Author:
Chen, Ke.
Description:
395 p.
Notes:
Source: Dissertation Abstracts International, Volume: 59-07, Section: A, page: 2712.
Contained By:
Dissertation Abstracts International59-07A.
Subject:
Public administration. -
Online resource:
http://pqdd.sinica.edu.tw/twdaoapp/servlet/advanced?query=9840034
ISBN:
9780591939200
Toward sustainable river basin management in China: The challenge of institutional reform and capacity building.
Chen, Ke.
Toward sustainable river basin management in China: The challenge of institutional reform and capacity building.
- 395 p.
Source: Dissertation Abstracts International, Volume: 59-07, Section: A, page: 2712.
Thesis (Ph.D.)--Western Michigan University, 1998.
Throughout human history water has been a key determinant for national development and human welfare. Existing river basin management (RBM) institutions and practices in China are incapable of fully meeting current needs, much less the challenges of sustainable development. Conceptual and institutional reforms will be needed to meet these challenges. New interdisciplinary thinking about the complex interactions between ecological, socio-economic and technological systems is reviewed to provide an ecosystemic perspective on RBM problems. An analytical framework which is interdisciplinary, systemic, historical, and comparative is then employed to focus on the institutional aspects of RBM regimes and their effects on natural-human interactions. Two Chinese national river basins--the Yellow River and the Huaihe River--are chosen as case studies to highlight certain common patterns of the RBM problematique as observed over time.
ISBN: 9780591939200Subjects--Topical Terms:
531287
Public administration.
Toward sustainable river basin management in China: The challenge of institutional reform and capacity building.
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Toward sustainable river basin management in China: The challenge of institutional reform and capacity building.
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395 p.
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Source: Dissertation Abstracts International, Volume: 59-07, Section: A, page: 2712.
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Adviser: Kenneth A. Dahlberg.
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Thesis (Ph.D.)--Western Michigan University, 1998.
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Throughout human history water has been a key determinant for national development and human welfare. Existing river basin management (RBM) institutions and practices in China are incapable of fully meeting current needs, much less the challenges of sustainable development. Conceptual and institutional reforms will be needed to meet these challenges. New interdisciplinary thinking about the complex interactions between ecological, socio-economic and technological systems is reviewed to provide an ecosystemic perspective on RBM problems. An analytical framework which is interdisciplinary, systemic, historical, and comparative is then employed to focus on the institutional aspects of RBM regimes and their effects on natural-human interactions. Two Chinese national river basins--the Yellow River and the Huaihe River--are chosen as case studies to highlight certain common patterns of the RBM problematique as observed over time.
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The research concludes that (1) SRBM is of vital importance to the success of China's ongoing reforms and her sustainable future. In spite of recent and significant reforms in China's RBM system, the complex task of recasting China's water management within a sustainable format still has a long way to go. (2) This is because water problems are becoming increasingly complex and unpredictable. They also involve an increasing number and diversity of interlinked systems. An ecosystemic perspective and adaptive management strategy involving interdisciplinary research modes, multi-criteria decision-making frameworks, and a SRBM informational framework will be required to cope with these problems. (3) The key challenge for SRBM institutions will be to match and integrate the RBM institutions with the long-term, different level socio-ecological dynamics of China's many different scale river basins. (4) This will require not only an integrated understanding of how RBM institutions coevolve with basin ecosystems, but also integrated management institutions to overcome the current multifaceted fragmentation of RBM, which constitutes a major institutional barrier to SRBM. (5) For these to emerge both political will and SRBM institutional capacity will be needed. (6) Geographic Information Systems (GIS) offer a potential technical means to enhance SRBM institutional capacity.
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School code: 0257.
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http://pqdd.sinica.edu.tw/twdaoapp/servlet/advanced?query=9840034
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