Access the full text.
Sign up today, get DeepDyve free for 14 days.
(1995)
The politics of private time: changing leisure patterns in urban China
Frederick Keck (2015)
Sentinels for the environment: birdwatchers in Taiwan and Hong Kong.China perspectives, 2015
(2014)
Three synchronized counts for migratory cranes and waterbirds
Vinod Mishra, R. Smyth (2013)
Working Hours in Chinese Enterprises: Evidence from Matched Employer–Employee DataLabor: Supply & Demand eJournal
Andrew Wells-Dang (2012)
Civil Society Networks in China and Vietnam
S. Tidemann, A. Gosler (2010)
Ethno-ornithology : birds, indigenous peoples, culture and society
(2017)
activist). (Accessed online https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hu_Jia_ (activist))
(2012)
limits of a popular approach to environmental governance. China Quart
Chen Jie (2012)
Transnational Civil Society in China
Gang Chen (2009)
Politics of China's Environmental Protection: Problems and Progress
(2010)
Multi-country poll reveals that majority of people want action on climate change, even if it entails costs
Matthew Gaudreau (2014)
State and Society in China’s Environmental PoliticsGlobal Environmental Politics, 14
Yanqi Tong (2007)
Bureaucracy Meets the Environment: Elite Perceptions in Six Chinese CitiesThe China Quarterly, 189
B. Mcfarlane, P. Boxall (1996)
Participation in wildlife Conservation by birdwatchersHuman Dimensions of Wildlife, 1
Weizhe Zhang, E. Goodale, Jin Chen (2014)
How contact with nature affects children's biophilia, biophobia and conservation attitude in ChinaBiological Conservation, 177
Jianguo Liu, P. Raven (2010)
China's Environmental Challenges and Implications for the WorldCritical Reviews in Environmental Science and Technology, 40
I. Putten, F. Boschetti, E. Fulton, Anthony Smith, O. Thébaud (2014)
Individual transferable quota contribution to environmental stewardship: a theory in need of validationEcology and Society, 19
(2013)
China Coastal Waterbird Census wins Ford Green Award
Koon-kwai Wong (2003)
The Environmental Awareness of University Students in Beijing, ChinaJournal of Contemporary China, 12
(2017)
China’s NGO regulations and uneven civil society development. China Policy Institute: Analysis – The Online Journal of the China Policy Institute
C. Lo, S. Leung (2000)
Environmental Agency and Public Opinion in Guangzhou: The Limits of a Popular Approach to Environmental Governance*The China Quarterly, 163
(2010)
CRIEnglish (2010) Liu Detian, a persistent protector of the Saunders Gull
(2007)
Enforcing wildlife protection in China: the legislative and political solutions
(2015)
Foreign non-profit groups fear authoritarian new Chinese Law. 20 June
(2004)
There is also a growing recognition of the economic costs of environmental degradation, resource scarcities, pollution and the loss of ecosystem services (Harris
Judi Pajo (2007)
Discovering Nature: Globalization and Environmental Culture in China and TaiwanComparative Sociology, 6
Koon-kwai Wong, Hon Chan (1996)
The environmental awareness of environmental protection bureaucrats in the People's Republic of ChinaEnvironmentalist, 16
(2014)
The project of monitoring of shorebirds in key tidal area
M. Whyte (2019)
Urban China: A Civil Society in the Making?State and Society in China
Andrew Wells-Dang (2012)
Civil Society Networks in China and Vietnam: Informal Pathbreakers in Health and the Environment
(2017)
2017) China ’eliminating civil society
Jie Chen (2012)
Transnational Civil Society in China: Intrusion and Impact
Cheng Yi-xin, Wang Jun-yan, H. Xin, Ma Zhi-jun (2013)
Present status and development of the birdwatching in mainland ChinaJournal of East China Normal University, 2013
(2014)
Why has philanthropy failed to take off in China
P. Stettenheim (2002)
A Passion for Birds/American Ornithology after Audubon, 104
(1994)
Environmental activism in China -fifteen years in review
Jin-Hyung Lee, D. Scott (2004)
Measuring Birding Specialization: A Confirmatory Factor AnalysisLeisure Sciences, 26
(2011)
Triple figures of spoon-billed sandpiper in China
Anna Brettell (2003)
The Politics of Public Participation and the Emergence of Environmental Proto-Movements in China
P. Ho (2001)
Greening Without Conflict? Environmentalism, NGOs and Civil Society in ChinaPSN: Interest Groups & Peak Associations (Topic)
(1988)
Bird conservation in the People's Repubic of China. Unpublished report to the RSPB
R. Weller (2006)
Discovering Nature: Globalization and Environmental Culture in China and Taiwan
M. Whyte, Fan Hong, J. Gottwald (2010)
Social Change and the Urban-Rural Divide in China
W. Churchill
The Provinces of China
(2015)
Global concern about climate change, broad support
Lei Xie (2011)
China's Environmental Activism in the Age of GlobalizationAsian Politics & Policy, 3
(2012)
Hunan establishes the first ‘Bird Protection Troops’ in the country
(2015)
CIA World Factbook
P. Harris (2004)
‘Getting Rich is Glorious’: Environmental Values in the People's Republic of ChinaEnvironmental Values, 13
Zhijun Ma, D. Melville, Jianguo Liu, Ying Chen, Hongyang Yang, W. Ren, Zhengwang Zhang, T. Piersma, Bo Li (2014)
Rethinking China's new great wallScience, 346
F. Jiguet, V. Devictor, R. Julliard, D. Couvet (2012)
French citizens monitoring ordinary birds provide tools for conservation and ecological sciencesActa Oecologica-international Journal of Ecology, 44
Donald Bren, E. Tchetgen (2022)
Nonparametric Statistics for the Behavioral SciencesThe SAGE Encyclopedia of Research Design
Zhijun Ma, Yixin Cheng, Junyan Wang, X. Fu (2012)
The rapid development of birdwatching in mainland China: a new force for bird study and conservationBird Conservation International, 23
Rural-Urban Disparities in Access to, Primary and Secondary Education under Market Reforms
T. Sicular, Yue Ximing, B. Gustafsson, Shi Li (2010)
How Large is China's Rural-Urban Income Gap?
(2009)
Birding in the United States: A demographic and economic analysis
Shixiong Cao, Li Chen, Zhande Liu (2009)
An Investigation of Chinese Attitudes toward the Environment: Case Study Using the Grain for Green Project, 38
Yanqi Tong (2005)
Environmental Movements in Transitional Societies: A Comparative Study of Taiwan and ChinaComparative politics, 37
(1995)
New 2 - day weekend has Chinese packing . 29 October . Los Angeles Times
(2014)
The eBird enterprise
Teh-chang Lin (2007)
Environmental NGOs and the Anti-Dam Movements in China: A Social Movement with Chinese CharacteristicsIssues & Studies, 43
K. Novak (2003)
The guardianNature Reviews Cancer, 3
(1995)
A view of wildlife management in China. Wildl
(2017)
A sanctuary for birds of prey
N. Collar, A. Long, P. Gil, Jaime Rojo (2007)
Birds and people : bonds in a timeless journey
J. Mackinnon, K. Phillipps, F. He, D. Mackinnon (2000)
A Field Guide to the Birds of China
(2016)
Environmental activist arrested in Hangzhou ; movement still hampered by legal and financial restrictions
(2009)
The State of China Atlas: Mapping the World's Fastest-Growing Economy
(2007)
Ten years of birdwatching in China
S. Kellert (1985)
Historical Trends in Perceptions and Uses of Animals in 20th Century AmericaEnvironmental Review, 9
Jianguo Liu, J. Diamond (2008)
Revolutionizing China's Environmental ProtectionScience, 319
(2012)
China's wage levels are less than half of the global average
(2008)
Bird watching organizations in mainland China
(2012)
Majority of Chinese prioritize environment over economy. (Accessed online http://www.gallup.com/poll/155102/majority-chinese-prioritize-environment-economy.aspx)
R. Schmid, D. Allen (1977)
The naturalist in Britain. A social historyMedical History, 21
(2008)
Anonymous (2008) Birds in China: The loneliness of a Chinese birdwatcher
Liu Xueyan, Liang Lu, Gong Peng, Liu Yang, L. Feifei (2013)
Bird watching in China reveals bird distribution changesChinese Science Bulletin, 58
R. Grumbine, Jian-chu Xu (2011)
Creating a 'Conservation with Chinese Characteristics'Biological Conservation, 144
E. Grumbine, Jian-chu Xu (2013)
Recalibrating China's environmental policy: The next 10 yearsBiological Conservation, 166
(2017)
China 'eliminating civil society' by targeting human rights activists -report
(2016)
a ) Birdwatching
Elizabeth Economy (2019)
The River Runs BlackForeign Affairs, 83
Guobin Yang (2005)
Environmental NGOs and Institutional Dynamics in ChinaThe China Quarterly, 181
S. Moss (2004)
A bird in the bush: a social history of birdwatching
R. Dunlap, Richard York (2008)
The Globalization of Environmental Concern and The Limits of The Postmaterialist Values Explanation: Evidence from Four Multinational SurveysThe Sociological Quarterly, 49
G. Hvenegaard (2002)
Birder Specialization Differences in Conservation Involvement, Demographics, and MotivationsHuman Dimensions of Wildlife, 7
B. Mcfarlane (1994)
SPECIALIZATION AND MOTIVATIONS OF BIRDWATCHERS
(1979)
promoting bird conservation
Guobin Yang, C. Calhoun (2007)
Media, Civil Society, and the Rise of a Green Public Sphere in ChinaChina Information, 21
(2013)
New distribution sites of Jankowski's bunting (Emberiza jankowskii)
C. Gang (2009)
Environmental NGOs and Emerging Civil Society
Xiaodong Chen, M. Peterson, Vanessa Hull, Chuntian Lu, Dayong Hong, Jianguo Liu (2013)
How Perceived Exposure to Environmental Harm Influences Environmental Behavior in Urban ChinaAMBIO, 42
(2013)
White-capped bunting (Emberiza stewarti): A new record of bird
R. Inglehart (1997)
Modernization and Postmodernization: Cultural, Economic, and Political Change in 43 Societies
Todd Shields, K. Zeng (2012)
The reverse environmental gender gap in China: evidence from "The China Survey".Social science quarterly, 93 1
Phillip Stalley, Dongning Yang (2006)
An Emerging Environmental Movement in China?The China Quarterly, 186
(2013)
Mapping China’s middle class
(2015)
China has come to tipping point on environment . 23 May . Taipei Times
(2012)
Running around for a bird
P. Harris (2006)
Environmental Perspectives and Behavior in ChinaEnvironment and Behavior, 38
Geoffrey Murray, Ian Cook (2002)
Green China: Seeking Ecological Alternatives
T. Hildebrandt (2011)
The Political Economy of Social Organization Registration in China*The China Quarterly, 208
Heran Zheng, Guosheng Wang (2014)
Achieving ecological restoration by working with local people: a Chinese scholar seeks win-win pathsEcology and Society, 19
(2010)
Durable goods penetration in Asian cities
(2013)
Birdwatching in China: a new force in Chinese attitudes towards nature and civil society. Bachelor of Arts thesis
SummaryBirdwatching has become a global pastime and a driving force for conservation. Because of China’s economic and environmental importance, the emergence of birdwatching as a mass participation leisure activity in China over the past three decades is of global interest. We documented this emergence by conducting an extensive literature search and two online questionnaires which we used to describe the history, geographic distribution, demographics, activities, motivations, and environmental concerns of Chinese birdwatchers. The emergence happened because of (1) the transfer of ornithological knowledge to birdwatchers, (2) the increasing political tolerance to pursue pastimes, (3) the increasing leisure time, affordability of optical equipment, and urbanisation of China’s society, (4) increased internet use, and (5) interactions of birdwatchers with the media and foreign birdwatchers. Of the 576 respondents to our questionnaires, two-thirds were male, about half were younger than 35 years of age, approximately 90% were university-educated, and many also had an above-average income and originated mostly from the more urbanised coastal or near-coastal provinces. Our respondents were thus part of China’s economic and educational elite who largely birdwatch for enjoyment, but also because of the knowledge gained about the birds’ ecology. Many birdwatchers have become concerned about the deteriorating state of the environment and are frustrated about the lack of government action. Within the political constraints set by the government, many birdwatchers support environmental conservation through various activities, which have yielded some conservation successes. However, birdwatching societies remain constrained by the same legislative and administrative restraints which limit the actions of other environmental non-governmental organizations, thus hindering the effective discourse between China’s government and its emerging but still strictly controlled and regulated civil society.
Bird Conservation International – Cambridge University Press
Published: Jul 2, 2018
Read and print from thousands of top scholarly journals.
Already have an account? Log in
Bookmark this article. You can see your Bookmarks on your DeepDyve Library.
To save an article, log in first, or sign up for a DeepDyve account if you don’t already have one.
Copy and paste the desired citation format or use the link below to download a file formatted for EndNote
Access the full text.
Sign up today, get DeepDyve free for 14 days.
All DeepDyve websites use cookies to improve your online experience. They were placed on your computer when you launched this website. You can change your cookie settings through your browser.