posted on 2015-07-21, 16:06authored byCaroline Upton
Mongolia’s new resource politics, central to the country’s geopolitical considerations and
ambitions in the twenty-first century, must be understood in relation to their complex, multiscalar
socio-cultural, historical and environmental dimensions. This paper draws on the
author’s participatory research activities with key informants in Ulaanbaatar and amongst
rural herding communities to illuminate key aspects, contexts and implications of the new
resource politics. Specifically, the paper presents an empirically informed analysis of
pertinent social and institutional forms, environmental and cultural values and aspects of
resource governance, with particular reference to land issues, pastoralism, mining and
resistance. Conceptually, it draws on recent work, especially in geography and political
ecology, on activism, conservation and particularly on emerging discourses and framings of
natural resources as ‘ecosystem services’. Through attention to these concepts, it highlights
contested dimensions of environmental values and valuation, of critical contemporary
importance in Mongolia’s new resource politics.
History
Citation
Inner Asia, 2014, 16 (2), pp. 252-274 (22)
Author affiliation
/Organisation/COLLEGE OF SCIENCE AND ENGINEERING/Department of Geography/Human Geography