1707588770
由此引发了一个漫长、复杂而有趣的过程,在此期间,中国专家、世界野生生物基金会的工作人员、当地人民、政府和大象之间相互作用,力图找到一个能让大象与当地居民在自然保护区共存下去的办法。争执的焦点在于,谁的“知识”和利益更重要?当大象因寻找稻米谷物而毁坏当地农民的农田时,它们是否以及怎样才能有权继续生存?在使用电围栏阻止大象进入农田遭遇失败和没收农民枪支以防止他们射杀大象之后,当地人认为大象已经变得越来越“厚颜无耻”,也不再惧怕人类了。村民们开始放弃在固定土地上的耕种,转而选择像前文所说的阿卡人的游耕方式。为了满足城市游客对大象的观赏兴趣,还从泰国引进了专业的驯兽师和饲养员,并安置在生态旅游设施“野象谷”中。尽管野生大象的数量确实有所增加,但对于大象和西双版纳的人们来说,这一切最终将走向何方,仍有待观察。[56]
1707588771
1707588772
[1]Robert Carin,RiverControlinCommunistChina(Hong Kong,HK:Union Research Institute,1962),13.
1707588773
1707588774
[2]Robert Carin,RiverControlinCommunistChina(Hong Kong,HK:Union Research Institute,1962),23.
1707588775
1707588776
[3]Ibid.,30-31.
1707588777
1707588778
[4]Yi Si,“The World’s Most Catastrophic Dam Failures:The August 1975 Collapse of the Banqiao and Shimantan Dams,”in TheRiverDragonHasCome!TheThree GorgesDamandtheFateofChina’sYangtzeRiverandItsPeople,ed.Dai Qing(Armonk,NY:M.E.Sharpe,1998),30.
1707588779
1707588780
[5]Shui Fu,“A Profile of Dams in China,”in TheRiverDragonHasCome!,ed.Dai Qing,18-24.
1707588781
1707588782
[6]关于水利专家黄万里特立独行的故事,他对三门峡大坝的反对意见以及这些对他和他的家庭的影响,可参见Shapiro,Mao’sWaragainstNature,48-62。
1707588783
1707588784
[7]Shapiro,Mao’sWaragainstNature,63.
1707588785
1707588786
[8]Shui Fu,“A Profile of Dams,”20-21.
1707588787
1707588788
[9]Ibid.,21.
1707588789
1707588790
[10]Yi Si,“The World’s Most Catastrophic Dam Failures,”25-38.
1707588791
1707588792
[11]Economy,TheRiverRunsBlack,2.中译本见易明:《一江黑水》,2页。
1707588793
1707588794
[12]Ibid.,4.
1707588795
1707588796
[13]Ibid.,1.
1707588797
1707588798
[14]参见Jim Yardley,“Industrial Pollution Destroys Fish Farms in Rural Area,”TheNewYorkTimes,September 12,2004;Jasper Becker,“The Death of China’s Rivers,”AsiaTimes,August 26,2003;Stephen Voss,“Industrial Pollution Kills Hundreds along the Huai River Basin in China,”http://www.stephenvoss.com/stories/ChinaWaterPollution/story.html;美国公共电视网一部四集纪录片“China from the Inside”中的第三集“Shifting Nature”。
1707588799
1707588800
[15]Economy,TheRiverRunsBlack,8.
1707588801
1707588802
[16]Lee Liu,“Made in China:Cancer Villages,”Environment:ScienceandPolicyforSustainableDevelopment 52,no.2(2010),8-21.
1707588803
1707588804
[17]Li, Fighting Famine in North China, 367-369.
1707588805
1707588806
[18]Ibid.,369.
1707588807
1707588808
[19]Li,FightingFamineinNorthChina,370.
1707588809
1707588810
[20]Jim Yardley,“Beneath Booming Cities,China’s Future Is Drying Up,”The NewYorkTimes,September 28,2007.
1707588811
1707588812
[21]Zhang Quanfa,“The South-to-North Water Diversion Project,”Frontiersin EcologyandtheEnvironment 3,no.2(2005):76;Shai Oster,“Water Project in China Is Delayed,”TheWallStreetJournal,December 31,2008,A4;Jasper Becker,“The Death of China’s Rivers”;“Factbox:Facts on China’s South-to-North Water Transfer Project,”Thomson Reuters,http://reuters.com/assets,February 26,2009.
1707588813
1707588814
[22]Liu Changming,“Environmental Issues and the South-North Water Transfer Scheme,”TheChinaQuarterly no.156(December 1998):904-906.
1707588815
1707588816
[23]Jianguo Wu,Jianhui Huang,Xingguo Han,Xianming Gao,Fengliang He,Mingxi Jiang,Zhigang Jiang,Richard B.Primack,Zehao Shen,“The Three Gorges Dam:An Ecological Perspective,”FrontiersonEcologyandtheEnvironment 2,no.5(2004):241-248.
1707588817
1707588818
[24]Jianguo Wu,Jianhui Huang,Xingguo Han,Zongqiang Xie,Xianming Gao,“Three Gorges Dam—Experiment in Habitat Fragmentation?”Science 300(May 23,2003):1239-1240.
1707588819
[
上一页 ]
[ :1.70758877e+09 ]
[
下一页 ]