1st Edition

Institutions, Regulatory Styles, Society and Environmental Governance in China

By Carlos Wing-Hung Lo, Shui-Yan Tang Copyright 2014
    320 Pages 7 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge

    320 Pages 7 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge

    During the past three decades of rapid industrial growth, China has suffered from devastating environmental degradation. Most scholarly and popular publications have painted a rather pessimistic picture about the worrisome trend. Yet a somewhat more optimistic view has emerged in the past decade given the Chinese government’s increased commitment to fighting industrial pollution, the public’s increased concerns regarding the adverse effects of pollution, and domestic and international civil society’s increased involvement in promoting environmental protection in China.

    Drawing on the authors’ extensive research on Guangdong Province and a few large cities in other provinces, this book provides an in-depth study on China’s environmental governance and regulatory enforcement in the past two decades. Section 1 examines various institutional constraints for environmental regulation enforcement at the local level and how governance reform efforts in the past decade have contributed to the lessening of those constraints. Section 2 draws on data derived from surveys and interviews conducted in multiple cities and times; it examines the dominant regulatory enforcement styles of local environmental protection bureaus and how these styles vary across different regions and over time. Section 3 examines how various stakeholders—the general public, environmental groups, government entities, and corporations—affect the environmental governance process.

    Overall, the book presents a cautiously optimistic view on the evolution of environmental governance in China. While highlighting many political, institutional, social, and economic constraints, it also documents many changes that have taken place—including reform efforts from within the government administrative system, increasingly societal concerns and actions, and changing attitudes among corporate executives—potentially paving the way for more effective environmental governance in the future.

    1. Institutional Constraints  2. Institutional Reform and Economic Changes  3. Service Organization Reform  4. Enforcement Styles and Effectiveness  5. Enforcement Styles: Regional Variations  6. Enforcement Styles: Changes over Time  7. Environmental Agencies and Public Opinion  8. Public Participation and Environmental Impact Assessment  9. Environmental NGOs  10. Corporate Responses to Stakeholder Pressure  11. Agency Responses to Stakeholder Support and Pressure

    Biography

    Carlos Wing-Hung Lo is Professor in the Department of Management and Marketing at the Hong Kong Polytechnic University. His main research interests are in the areas of law and government, environmental governance, cultural heritage management, corporate environmental management, and corporate social responsibility, within the context of China and Hong Kong. Currently he is researching environmental regulatory control and corporate environmental management in the Pearl River Delta Region.

    Shui-Yan Tang is Frances R. and John J. Duggan Distinguished Professor of Public Administration in the Sol Price School of Public Policy at the University of Southern California. His main research interests include institutional analysis, common-pool resource governance, environmental politics and policy, and collaborative governance.

    " ... this book is a very useful and convenient compilation of the authors' extensive and detailed published studies since the late 1990s on problems and developments in local environmental governance, particularly in Guangzhou and several other cities. Their investigations and conceptual analysis should also provide models for scholars studying environmental governance in other major cities in China in the future."

    —  Environmental Politics, Vol. 23, Issue 6, 2014