Project Aims
Fundamental policy-driven changes are transforming
Underpinning these policies is the presumption that extensive mobile pastoralism based on communal pasture use is backward and inefficient, and has led to land degradation. Using a “Tragedy of the Commons” analysis, it is also argued that livestock-owners will take better care of the grazing land if it is privately controlled, or that pastures are so abused that grazing must be banned altogether.
Severe land degradation and desertification on the Tibetan Plateau has been widely noted by Chinese scientists, with overgrazing by livestock usually identified as the principal human factor causing degradation. Many millions of hectares are classified as desertified to varying degrees, with 20.5 million ha. in the Tibetan Autonomous Region alone categorised in this way. Some Chinese and international scientists have nonetheless questioned the usefulness of enclosure and exclusion as remedies for degradation. This project examines both the consequences and reasons for the implementation of this land reform process on the Tibetan Plateau.