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China presents a paradox for scholars of environmental politics. Environmental politics and policymaking in China now includes elements critical to environmental protection in the West, including non-governmental participation and stringent environmental legislation. Yet the country’s authoritarian system constrains popular participation, and environmental outcomes are generally poor. China’s South–North Water Transfer Project (SNWTP) embodies this puzzle: despite the pluralisation and development of environmental politics and policymaking, the SNWTP is a technocratic mega-project that imposes high social, economic, and environmental costs. What explains this puzzle, and what are the implications for understanding environmental politics in other authoritarian developing countries? I evaluate two current theories – Ecological Modernisation and Authoritarian Environmentalism – against the SNWTP case, and argue that it illustrates the ability of governments to co-opt environmental politics to pursue other strategic objectives, in turn necessitating greater attention to the mix of persuasive and coercive strategies in environmental politics.

Acknowledgements

This research was conducted while the author was Giorgio Ruffolo, Postdoctoral Research Fellow with the Energy Technology Innovation Policy Project, Belfer Center for Science and International Affairs, and the Sustainability Science Program, Mossavar-Rahmani Center for Business and Government, both at Harvard University. Support from Italy’s Ministry of Environment, Land, and Sea is gratefully acknowledged.

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