Authoritarian Environmentalism and Epistemological Violence: A Southern Green Criminology Analysis of the 2014 Lanzhou Water Crisis and the Belt and Road Initiative Expansion into the Global Water Sector

Abstract

This article examines authoritarian states’ roles in commodifying freshwater resources in illiberal societies. The authors argue that collusion between global capitalism and national authoritarian interests has affected the legal structure, regulation enforcement, and institutional practices of public–private partnerships in China’s municipal water systems, resulting in regulatory failures in drinking water provision. The article also explores the implications of China’s state capitalist expansion into the global water utilities market as part of the green Belt and Road Initiative and suggests that this expansion may lead to new patterns of environmental concerns in the Global South. The findings demonstrate that collusion between neoliberal and authoritarian capitalist expansions shapes increasing inequalities and environmental governance standards in the Global South. The authors stress the need to view environmental and public health disasters resulting from water privatization as a transnational crime rather than solely focusing on nation-state regulatory mechanisms that exemplify “metropolitan thinking” in criminology.

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Published: 2023-12-01
Pages:27 to 38
Section:Articles
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How to Cite
Mao, K. and Zhao, Z. (2023) “Authoritarian Environmentalism and Epistemological Violence: A Southern Green Criminology Analysis of the 2014 Lanzhou Water Crisis and the Belt and Road Initiative Expansion into the Global Water Sector”, International Journal for Crime, Justice and Social Democracy, 12(4), pp. 27-38. doi: 10.5204/ijcjsd.2948.

Author Biographies

Colorado State University
 United States

KuoRay Mao is Associate Professor of Sociology at Colorado State University. His research examines the intricate relationship between development, environmental crises, and the global environmental regulatory framework. His recent projects explore how neoliberal governance strategies—such as payment for ecosystem services and green finance—perpetuate social and environmental injustices and lead to the rise of authoritarian environmentalism in the Global South.

Colorado State University
 China

Zhong Zhao is the founder and director of Green Camel Bell, a grassroots environmental NGO in Northwest China. He's currently a visiting scholar at the Department of Sociology, Colorado State University. From 2022 to 2023, he served as a Yale World Fellow and was a visiting scholar at the Paul Tsai Center at Yale Law School. During 2015-2016, he served as a Hubert H. Humphrey fellow at the University of California, Davis, studying Natural Resources Management and Climate Change. In 2009, Time magazine honored him as a “Hero of the Environment,” and the Asia Society nominated him as an Asia 21 Young Leader in 2017. His recent advocacy projects have centered on governance issues concerning environmental justice, public involvement in environmental legislation and decision-making, and the adaptation of international environmental law to local contexts.