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12 Rev. Eur. Stud. 1 (2020)

handle is hein.journals/rveurost12 and id is 1 raw text is: 

                                                                      Review of European Studies; Vol. 12, No. 1; 2020
                                                                              ISSN  1918-7173   E-ISSN 1918-7181
                                                                 Published by Canadian Center of Science and Education



 Exploiting Shangri-La: Assessing the Tibetan Plateau's Natural Resources

                                 and   the  Work of Karl Wittfogel

                                                  Brock Ternes
Correspondence:  Brock  Ternes, PhD (Corresponding Author)  SUNY   Cortland, Sociology/Anthropology Department,
P.O. Box 2000, Cortland, NY 13045, USA


Received: November  13, 2019    Accepted: December  7, 2019   Online Published: December  17, 2019
doi:10.5539/res.vl2nlpl         URL: https://doi.org/10.5539/res.vl2nlpl


Abstract
This paper applies Karl Wittfogel's theory of hydraulic societies to China's relationship with Tibet. It argues that the
Chinese are interested in control over Tibet not only for its land, location, or wealth of natural resources, but also for
control of its headwaters. Hundreds of millions of people rely on the numerous large rivers that start in the Tibetan plateau,
making  the region a critically important water supply for Asia. Wittfogel's work theorizes that China's territory and
authority has expanded with the need to secure water for its large population and food production. The paper contains two
sections: the first summarizes Wittfogel's arguments, a history of Tibet, and China's control of it; the second describes
China's attempts to modernize Tibet, specifically through river development, and the environmental damage caused by
such efforts. Tibet's rivers are crucial for the entirety of Asia, and the Plateau's massive supplies of water are just one of its
many  resources. By focusing on rivers, this article describes the importance of Tibet and how increasing levels of resource
extraction legitimatize Chinese centralized authority.
Keywords:  river development, natural resources, Karl Wittfogel, critical theory
If water is the essential ingredient of life, then water supply is the essential ingredient of civilization. David Sedlak,
Water 4.0 (2014, p. 1).
1. Introduction
Freshwater scarcity has become a growing concern in Asia, where drought and desertification have jeopardized large
swaths of the continent. Extreme climate shifts have stressed water supplies across the continent, leaving its ecosystems
and societies struggling to secure sufficient supplies of water. In an attempt to augment its water supplies, the Chinese
have advanced a decades-long operation of river modification which includes some of the world's largest dams, channels,
and reservoirs. To understand how surface water in Asia has been stressed by these construction projects, this paper
applies the work of the critical theorist Karl Wittfogel to Sino-Tibetan relations. Tibetian headwaters feed several rivers
on which  hundreds of millions of people rely, and China's investment in grandiose hydro-projects in the region lends
credence to Wittfogel's notion of hydraulic societies. Rivers and societies comprise an interconnected socio-ecological
system, and understanding China's efforts to access and manipulate the most in-demand rivers in Asia can provide insight
into the relevance of critical theory in the context of environmental degradation and resource depletion.
Arguably no nation on earth has fought as hard to secure its water as China, and Wittfogel's work offers important insight
while explaining China's drive to control the waters stemming from the Plateau. Asia as a whole contains large desiccated
landscapes and has a relative disadvantage compared to other continents: it has to provide water for two-thirds of the
world's population with only a third of its runoff, 80 percent of which is concentrated in the short monsoon season
(Pearce, 2006, p. 22). The challenges of slaking China's thirst derive in part from the uneven distribution of water within
the country. Southern China (which is generally defined as the area of Yangtze River basin, and territory to the south)
holds four-fifths of China's available freshwater and has roughly half of China's population. The North China Plain is
much  more  water-stressed and suffers the severest shortages; it has 45 percent of the population, two-thirds of the
farmland, and only one-fifth of the nation's water (Bochuan, 1991; Liu, 2002). China now has over a dozen megacities,
each with at least 10 million inhabitants, and nearly half of China's 600 largest cities are projected to face severe water
shortages (Gall, 2015).
As a result of this placement of settlements and farms, cities in the arid north like Beijing are rapidly exploiting their
groundwater. Rural and urban water usage are in rife competition, as the water needed by rural communities has been
diverted to the ever-growing megacity Beijing. Beijing's expanding suburbs now boast over 40,000 wells, which supply
two-thirds of the city's water, but excessive groundwater withdrawals have led to land subsidence and fractured pipes


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