Dunlop, Sarah Reiach
Description
I examine changing herding practices in Xilingol, Inner Mongolia, contrasting
the perspectives of herders with those of local officials and scientists. I also
carried out comparative fieldwork in a similar steppe environment in
Mongolia. I present a model for research which involves exploring multiple
perspectives, including different scales and domains. The model has broad
applicability, but was designed in response to pressing problems involving
human-environmental interactions.
In...[Show more] 1992-1993, from the point of view of many Chinese scientists and policy
makers, traditional Mongol herding in Inner Mongolia was in a state of crisis,
with widespread land degradation and frequent, crippling natural disasters.
Their response involved sweeping changes to what was perceived as an
inefficient and unproductive herding system. Xilingol herders were facing an
additional challenge with the end of communal herding. In Mongolia, herders
were also adjusting to the .end of the collective era. However, political, social
and historical factors had contributed to significantly different development
agendas each side of the Chinese/Mongolian border.
Like the officials and scientists, Xilingol herders recognised the impact of
climatic extremes, environmental change, and the potential to increase their
standard of living. However, their interpretations differed in several crucial
ways. Notably, herders did not perceive the climate as a series of recurrent
natural disasters, but rather as a variable, harsh, but well-understood part of
their normal environment. From their point of view, traditional herding
techniques allowed them to respond to this variability by exploiting
environmental heterogeneity. In contrast, scientists either saw herder methods
as 'backward', or assumed that traditional skills were no longer practised.
I documented a high level of environmental knowledge among herders,
involving identification and careful use of resources at different scales. This
allowed them to provide for their stock during the normal seasonal cycle, and
to respond to more extreme periods. Where their fundamental technique,
movement of stock, was limited, herders were frustrated. They were no longer
able to avoid the worst excesses of climatic extremes, nor move away from
areas where heavy grazing was leading to environmental change. Inner
Mongol herders blamed increasing local populations, associated with Han
immigration, for the loss of land and restrictions on nomadism.
Competing assessments of Mongol herding partly reflect divergent responses
to variability. I explore the influence of scale on interpretations of
heterogeneity and, more generally, argue for the importance of a critical
awareness of scale.
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