Start

01-25-2024
09:00 PM

End

01-25-2024
10:00 PM

Location

Online Event

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Event details

Time: Thursday January 25, 9:00PM BJT

Zoom: 952 4679 3871; Passcode: 0125

Speaker: Dr. Jesse Rodenbiker, Associate Research Scholar at Princeton University, Assistant Teaching Professor of Geography at Rutgers University

Abstract

Ecological States critically examines ecological policies in the People’s Republic of China to show how campaigns of scientifically based environmental protection transform nature and society. While many point to China’s ecological civilization programs as a new paradigm for global environmental governance, Jesse Rodenbiker argues that ecological redlining extends the reach of the authoritarian state.

Although Chinese urban sustainability initiatives have driven millions of citizens from their land and housing, Rodenbiker shows that these migrants are not passive subjects of state policy. Instead, they creatively navigate resettlement processes in pursuit of their own benefit. However, their resistance is limited by varied forms of state-backed infrastructural violence.

Through extensive fieldwork with scientists, urban planners, and everyday citizens in southwestern China, Ecological States exposes the ways in which the scientific logics and practices fundamental to China’s green urbanization have solidified state power and contributed to dispossession and social inequality.

Bio

Jesse Rodenbiker is an associate research scholar at Princeton University with the Center on Contemporary China, and an assistant teaching professor of geography at Rutgers University. His research focuses on environmental governance, urbanization, and social inequality in China and globally. Rodenbiker is the author of the book Ecological States: Politics of Science and Nature in Urbanizing China (2023, Cornell University Press). He has written for Annals of the American Association of Geographers, Environment and Planning E: Nature and Space, International Journal of Urban and Regional Research, Land Use Policy, and other venues. Rodenbiker holds a doctorate in Geography from the University of California, Berkeley. His work has been supported by fellowships from the American Council of Learned Societies, Chiang Ching-kuo Foundation, Fulbright, Social Science Research Council, and the Wilson Center, among others.

This event is part of the lecture series of the Center for the Study of Contemporary China Governing China Cluster.