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| Document Type(s): | Book Chapter |
| Book Title: | Sediments of Time: Environment and Society in Chinese History |
| Article/Chapter Title: | Official Thinking on Environmental Issues and the State's Environmental Roles in Eighteenth-Century China |
| Editor(s): | Elvin, Mark; Ts'ui-jung, Liu |
| Author(s): | Dunstan, Helen |
| Religion(s): | Taoism |
| Publisher Name: | Cambridge University Press |
| Place of Publication: | Cambridge |
| Date of Publication: | 1998 |
| Pages: | 585-614 |
| Annotation: | Dunstan examines official state documents written by Confucian trained administrators and outlines the environmental policies of a period that was faced with both high population growth and environmental limits on expansion. Issues such as family planning, reclamation of lands, salinization, development planning, and tree planting are included in the authors analysis. |
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