dc.contributor.author | Tyfield, David | de |
dc.contributor.author | Rodríguez, Fabricio | de |
dc.date.accessioned | 2024-05-21T14:11:51Z | |
dc.date.available | 2024-05-21T14:11:51Z | |
dc.date.issued | 2022 | de |
dc.identifier.issn | 2566-6878 | de |
dc.identifier.uri | https://www.ssoar.info/ssoar/handle/document/94198 | |
dc.description.abstract | As the climate crisis intensifies, overlapping with the emergence of a lethal virus, and a planet poisoning economy, questions regarding thinking-and-doing transition become increasingly urgent. In this article, we explore the concept of "ecological civilisation" (EcoCiv) as a productive conjunction of Chinese concepts and ways of thinking that precede China's encounter with Western modernity, and their re-reading and revision from a post-Western modernity lens. China's role in any possible global transition to sustainability is unquestionably central - yet curiously neglected in transition studies. At the same time the official project of EcoCiv is in fact emerging as the very opposite of its proclaimed spirit. The article offers a reconceptualisation of shengtai wenming (ecological civilisation) as a paradigm shift to life-ising the economy (and society) instead of economising life. From this altered perspective, the article presents and discusses preliminary evidence of a largely neglected, but potentially significant, bottom-up, extra-state dynamism in contemporary China that entails both elements and principles for a genuinely ecological, trans-modern civilisation. It concludes with reflections on the resulting change in agenda, not least for transition studies, outlining a set of four principles of doing shengtai wenming - i.e. of life-ising transition. | de |
dc.language | en | de |
dc.subject.ddc | Ökologie | de |
dc.subject.ddc | Ecology | en |
dc.subject.other | shengtai wenming; ecological civilisation; trans-modernity; transition; life-ising | de |
dc.title | Against and For China's Ecological Civilisation: Economising the Bios or "Life-ising" Transition? | de |
dc.description.review | begutachtet (peer reviewed) | de |
dc.description.review | peer reviewed | en |
dc.source.journal | International Quarterly for Asian Studies (IQAS) | |
dc.source.volume | 53 | de |
dc.publisher.country | DEU | de |
dc.source.issue | 3 | de |
dc.subject.classoz | Ökologie und Umwelt | de |
dc.subject.classoz | Ecology, Environment | en |
dc.subject.thesoz | China | de |
dc.subject.thesoz | China | en |
dc.subject.thesoz | nachhaltige Entwicklung | de |
dc.subject.thesoz | sustainable development | en |
dc.rights.licence | Creative Commons - Namensnennung, Nicht kommerz., Keine Bearbeitung 4.0 | de |
dc.rights.licence | Creative Commons - Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works 4.0 | en |
internal.status | formal und inhaltlich fertig erschlossen | de |
internal.identifier.thesoz | 10040272 | |
internal.identifier.thesoz | 10062390 | |
dc.type.stock | article | de |
dc.type.document | Zeitschriftenartikel | de |
dc.type.document | journal article | en |
dc.source.pageinfo | 441-469 | de |
internal.identifier.classoz | 20900 | |
internal.identifier.journal | 2245 | |
internal.identifier.document | 32 | |
internal.identifier.ddc | 577 | |
dc.source.issuetopic | China beyond China, Part II | de |
dc.identifier.doi | https://doi.org/10.11588/iqas.2022.3.15525 | de |
dc.description.pubstatus | Veröffentlichungsversion | de |
dc.description.pubstatus | Published Version | en |
internal.identifier.licence | 20 | |
internal.identifier.pubstatus | 1 | |
internal.identifier.review | 1 | |
internal.pdf.valid | false | |
internal.pdf.wellformed | true | |
internal.pdf.encrypted | false | |
ssoar.urn.registration | false | de |