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CP0314 Research Project Candidate Name/Number: Foo Cexiang / 0602721

Self-sustaining Villages as Sustainable Development in China: Case Study of Xin Jian Tibetan Village, Yunnan

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1.1

Introduction
Spatial Models of Sustainable Development in China

China, the worlds most rapidly growing economy over the past two decades, home to a fifth of its population, is certainly one of the key actors on the global arena today. The decisions and actions China takes in her pursuit of development will have significant implications for the entire world, in its quest towards sustainable development in the 21st century. This has been recognized by international politicians, policy makers and researchers alike, as much so by decision-makers in China itself. 1 In the past decade, one of the key strategies of both the Chinese central and local governments to achieve sustainable development has been the planning and development of eco-cities. This is in fact, not a new phenomenon. As early as 1996, the then State Environmental Planning Agency issued the policy document Guidelines for the Building of Eco-Communities (1996-2050) to promote the planning and construction of eco-communities across the country. This was actively adopted by the local governments and by 2003, 135 cities or local municipalities had commenced on planning for ecological settlements at different scales and localities. (Yip, 2008) The most highly publicized of these was by the Shanghai Industry Investment Corporation in 2005, for the Dongtan Eco-City at Chongming Island in Shanghai, in collaboration with ARUP. At the national level, the Chinese government entered a collaborative partnership with the government of Singapore in 2007 to plan and develop a 30 sq km Eco-City in the coastal new town area in Tianjin, with the agreed vision clearly stating the Eco-City would serve as a model of sustainable development for other cities in China. 2 The choice of the Eco-City as the dominant spatial model for sustainable development in China has not been without good reason. Key of these have been its prospects for economic advancement through higher efficiency of infrastructure provision and reach, environmental sustainability through reduced transportation greenhouse emissions and closed-loop ecosystems and social development through greater outreach of education and health services.

Chinese President Hu Jintao has stressed on numerous occasions in recent years at different forums, Chinas commitment to contribute to global sustainable development. www.mfa.gov.cn/eng/wjb/zzjg/gjs/gjsxw/t171294.htm http://www.tianjinecocity.gov.sg/Press%20Releases/2008/01_31_2008.htm

www.59edu.com/jiaoyuzixun/englishnews/politics/200801/5400.html, www.nytimes.com/2009/09/23/world/asia/23hu.text.html
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CP0314 Research Project Candidate Name/Number: Foo Cexiang / 0602721


Self-sustaining Villages as Sustainable Development in China: Case Study of Xin Jian Tibetan Village, Yunnan

One of the important consequences of the construction of such planned Eco-Cities on brownfield land however, is the forced relocation of villagers who lived on the designated sites. Already in Tianjin, more than 2000 villagers have been made to relocate for the construction of the Eco-City. Dongtan was far more ambitious at the drawing-board stage, planning to relocate all the 650,000 original inhabitants on Chongming Island into modern housing, to make room for eco-tourism and eco-farming.
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At a broader level, the policy of urban relocation has been introduced as a key

component of the poverty-reduction strategy for all rural areas by the Chinese government. (Information Office of the State Council of the PRC, 2001) Developments in the past two years have however, cast a much more negative light on the prospects of Eco-Cities in China. In her overview on the situation of Eco-Cities in China, Larson (2009) gave the following critique, Mostly conceived by international architects, Chinas eco-cities were intended to be models of green design. But the planning was done with little awareness of how local people lived, and the much touted projects have largely been scrapped. She makes specific reference to Dongtan, which has stagnated at master-planning stage with no development at all on the ground and criticized by environmentalists and academics as being a mere greenwashing tool by the SIIC, never intended to become a reality 4. Reference was also made to Huangbaiyu, an eco-village development, rather than an Eco-City, but designed on the similar concept of re-housing the original inhabitants in newly planned and constructed communities. These incorporated state-of-the art environmentally friendly technologies such as special hay and pressed-earth bricks in construction. The lasting image of this project was that of some homes built with garages although the villagers did not have cars. This paper however, will not sound the death knell for Eco-Cities as some journalists have prematurely done. After all, the reasons for failure of the publicised Eco-Cities are hardly insurmountable. The progress of the Tianjin Eco-City is a much more optimistic example where more consideration has been given to issues of financial funding and local lifestyles. What is of far greater importance to the purpose of this paper however, are the consequences of urban relocation that a spatial developmental model as the Eco-City is built upon. In particular, the alienation of villagers who find themselves uprooted, or gradually entrenched through the encroachment of urban land or forced urban relocation has been well documented in general psychological terms (Bhugra, 2004), but also in the specific context of places all over the world such as Germany (Jell & Bahlsen, 2003) and China itself. (Yan, 2005)
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http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/6756289.stm http://www.ethicalcorp.com/content.asp?ContentID=5552

CP0314 Research Project Candidate Name/Number: Foo Cexiang / 0602721


Self-sustaining Villages as Sustainable Development in China: Case Study of Xin Jian Tibetan Village, Yunnan

The theory of economic advancement for rural migrants has also been subjected to questioning, especially the loss of livelihoods for farmers who have lost their lands. (He et.al, 2009) It is this failure of designers and government advocates of Eco-Cities to consider the possible choice of rural inhabitants to remain on their land and lead their chosen lifestyles which forms the key line of concern this paper has with regards to Eco-Cities. The paper does not discount the possibility that if well managed, the Eco-City offers the potential in improving the sustainability of urban communities, and even voluntary rural migrants who seek opportunities lacking in the rural places they come from. The paper recognizes the importance of urban sustainability, considering the rapid pace of urbanization in China today, with the urban population crossing 54% at the end of 2008. However, it must be equally noted that the remaining 46% or 607 million people still reside in rural areas, and a decision to shift to the urban areas can be explained as much by push factors in poorly serviced rural areas, as the allure of pull factors the urban areas provide. This paper considers it critical that decision and policy makers in China give due recognition to selfsustaining rural communities which have formulated their preferred lifestyles over years living in their villages. The majority of such communities will belong to the ethnic minority groups in China which account for close to 10% of the entire population, or 123 million people, but there are many ethnic Han villages which will express a similar sentiment towards their villagers. To provide a counter-model against the overtly top-down Eco-City, this paper will research into the sustainability of bottom-up self-sustaining villages: How sustainable is the self-sustaining village as a model of spatial development? It must be emphasised that in carrying out the research, the stand this paper takes is for the selfsustaining village to be an alternative model, not a replacement for the Eco-City. There is no direct comparison between both models, nor is there any normative opinion that one is better than the other. In fact, the paper rejects any form of spatial determinism which purports either Eco-Cities or self-sustaining villages as the only sustainable built form. It is the purpose of the research to open up the sustainable development discourse to allow the consideration of sustainable lifestyles in both urban and rural areas. The paper recognises the differences amongst individuals as to their lifestyle preferences, and it is these differences which it feels should be respected by policy-makers. The concept of providing choice to people to lead the lives they have reason to value (Sen, 1999) emerges as an important theme throughout the report.

CP0314 Research Project Candidate Name/Number: Foo Cexiang / 0602721


Self-sustaining Villages as Sustainable Development in China: Case Study of Xin Jian Tibetan Village, Yunnan

The paper will now define what it views as the self-sustaining village. In the current socioeconomic climate of globalization, the self-sustaining village cannot exist as a socio-economic entity without any external interaction. However, what defines the self-sustaining village is its primary local dependence of food, accommodation and employment. Market exchange through the sale of locally produced products onto the external market, or the procurement of goods and services from the external market still exists. Similarly, there can also be some form of labour involvement outside the local context by individual members of households, but the main source of employment is still local. These local employment opportunities include farming, craft-making and increasingly tourism. Hence, it is important that the self-sustaining village not be confused with the concept of the subsistence village, which seeks as its goal subsistence without any wider socioeconomic interaction.

1.2

Sustainable Well-Being as Sustainable Development

Before proceeding with this inquiry, the paper must now first define sustainable development, in itself a much contested term and concept. The most commonly used definition of it, taken from the Brundtland Report (WCED 1987), is that sustainable development is development that meets the needs of the present without compromising the ability of future generations to meet their own needs. This broad definition is open to many different interpretations on what may constitute needs, and the concept has been seen as vague enough to serve as a metafix, uniting everybody from profit-minded industrialist to subsistence farmer. (Lele, 1991:613) Yet, for purposes of policy guidance, this report cannot rely on such a cryptic definition. The report requires a definition of sustainable development which is clearly observable and measurable, and which provides an accurate measure of society phenomena. After detailed consideration, the report settled for a definition of sustainable development as development which brings about the improvement of levels of well-being which can be sustained over time. The theoretical background of this definition is provided by the work of the Commission on the Measurement of Economic Performance and Social Progress or CMEPSP (consisting of among others two Nobel laureates in Stiglitz and Sen) in 2009. Commissioned by French President Nicholas Sarkozy, the Commission had one of its main aims to explain the gap between the statistical measurement of socio-economic phenomena and citizen perception of the same phenomena and in doing so, consider what additional information might be required for the production of more relevant indicators of social progress besides the GDP indicator of economic performance. The report finds that the reason for the perceived citizen gap is due to the inability of

CP0314 Research Project Candidate Name/Number: Foo Cexiang / 0602721


Self-sustaining Villages as Sustainable Development in China: Case Study of Xin Jian Tibetan Village, Yunnan

inanimate objects of convenience (e.g. GNP or GDP) to reflect on levels of well-being. From these findings, this paper infers that to provide an accurate measure of society phenomena, it is the wellbeing of individuals that should be the direct target of any analysis on development. Sustainability seen under this light will be the measure of whether levels of well-being can be sustained over time. At this point, the paper would also note that it is the lack of consideration to well-being which is the key reason why raze and build strategies of the Eco-Cities have failed to consider the effects of alienation on those forced to relocate. A scan of the Key Performance Indicators of the most successful of these, the Tianjin Eco-City, shows all 26 quantitative indicators which are effectively inanimate objects, e.g percentage of green buildings5, none of which measure well-being. In no way does this paper advocate a rejection of economic and other objective measures of development for human society. What it does believe however, is that the key measurement of development must be its effects on the well-being of society. In the literature review chapter, the paper will detail the methods in which well-being and its sustainability can be measured, and this will form the basis for the research into self-sustaining villages as spatial models of sustainable development.

1.3

Introduction to Xin Jian Tibetan Village

The paper selects the case study methodology in undertaking the research and the reasons for such a choice will be explained under the methodology chapter. This introductory chapter will however introduce the chosen unit of analysis and explain the critical nature of it for the research question. The obvious requirement the research question and context calls for in the selection of a subject of study is a primarily self-sustaining village in China. There are however, many possible candidates for this within China. Among the plethora of possible units of analysis, Xin Jian Tibetan Village in the province of Yunnan, was selected for its critical and revelatory nature. As explained in the section of spatial models in China, the key poverty-reduction strategy of most local governments has been the relocation of rural villagers into urban areas. The local Shangri-la County Government of which Xin Jian is administered under however, has been an anomaly in this. In its 11th Five Year Economic and Social Development Plan (2006), the local government stated clearly its developmental strategy to support a balanced town-village relationship, respect the developmental choices of its inhabitants, and regard development and conservation with equal importance.
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Key Performance Indicators of Tianjin Eco-City http://www.tianjinecocity.gov.sg/KPI.htm#3

CP0314 Research Project Candidate Name/Number: Foo Cexiang / 0602721


Self-sustaining Villages as Sustainable Development in China: Case Study of Xin Jian Tibetan Village, Yunnan

This political directive has been actualised through concrete initiatives on the ground to provide villages in Shangri-la with basic infrastructure including electricity, clean water, education and access to major roads. This paper considers this to be a key critical factor before any meaningful assessment of self-sustaining villages can be conducted. Following the argument of Amartya Sen (1999), this paper believes that the role of the state in providing the basic rights of clean water and education is a pre-necessity for any form of self-initiated bottom-up social development. To assess villages which have not been given any opportunity to shape their own meaningful lives through provision of such basic rights would hardly be reflective of the potential of self-sustaining villages. The second key reason for the choice of Xin Jian Tibetan Village was the revelatory opportunity it offered for research. The Tibetan village communities are traditionally culturally and physically separated from the mainstream Han Chinese societies. Amongst a range of other factors, the language barrier and a tendency to keep to their closed-knit communities prevented budding researchers like me from extensive intrusion into their spheres of life. However, through the introduction of a local contact in Shangri-la County, I was presented with the unique opportunity to have personal interaction with the community in Xin Jian Tibetan Village, facilitated by a couple of the villagers who were also conversant in Mandarin. It is this two day field immersion that offered me the opportunity to research into the religious, cultural, environmental and material aspects of their lives, forming a holistic picture from which to explain the sustainability of their well-being. Xin Jian Tibetan Village is thus selected as the unit of analysis to represent the self-sustaining village, not because it is representative of villages in China, but for its unique and critical characteristic.

CP0314 Research Project Candidate Name/Number: Foo Cexiang / 0602721


Self-sustaining Villages as Sustainable Development in China: Case Study of Xin Jian Tibetan Village, Yunnan

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2.1

Literature Review
Objectives of the Literature Review

The literature review process within the case study strategy stands out from the role it normally carries in other social research methods, where the main aim is to provide an overview of the existing literature on the chosen area of research. The literature review of the case study has two objectives beyond simply providing an overview of the existing literature on spatial models of sustainable development in China. The first is to inform the methodology chapter on possible means the paper can take in attempting to answer the chosen research question. In the case of this paper, this is, how sustainable is the self-sustaining village as a spatial model of development? The second objective of the literature review is to identify a range of secondary theoretical propositions within the existing literature, which can form the basis of data analysis for the research. These theories will include both individual and societal theories that for the purposes of this research paper must be linked to the two themes of well-being and sustainability which the chosen definition of sustainable development entails. The literature review chapter then must serve as a means to the overall research strategy, and not be regarded as an end in itself.

2.2

Sustainable Development in China

Spatial versus Sectoral Research A synoptic understanding of the current literature on sustainable development in China can distinguish between two clear research approaches: the spatial and sectoral. Broadly defined, spatial research has a clear spatial dimension as the unit/s of analysis, and this would include research into individual spatial scales such as villages , towns and cities, and analytic research of phenomena and relationship between scales, such as the urban-rural divide. Sectoral research in contrast, concentrates on the sectoral dimensions of sustainable development, and would include sectors such as energy (Ni & Johansson, 2003), industry (Fang et.al, 2007), agriculture (Sanders, 2000) in particular. There is scope for overlap between both approaches, in that spatial research would consider the relevant sectors within the spatial scale, and likewise, sectoral research can be conducted within the context of a spatial scale. The key distinction hence, is the key unit/s of analysis which the research centres upon.

CP0314 Research Project Candidate Name/Number: Foo Cexiang / 0602721


Self-sustaining Villages as Sustainable Development in China: Case Study of Xin Jian Tibetan Village, Yunnan

Spatial Research in China This literature review will concentrate on the spatial research as the research topic of this paper spatial models of sustainable development can only be understood within a spatial dimension and scale. With the prevalence of policy decisions in favour of Eco-Cities and urbanization in general, it is perhaps not surprising that the large majority of spatial research concentrates on the urban scale, and on cities in particular. These include research into the spatial models of the Compact City (Chen et.al, 2008), which concentrates on the advantages of mixed-used areas in close proximity and the Eco-City in general, which considers aspects of environmental and urban design in addition to concerns of the Compact City. (Wang & Ye, 2004) As the construction of actual Eco-Cities is still in its infancy, the research in this area is limited to theoretical propositions of the potential advantages and disadvantages of such planned initiatives. There is no example within the current literature which seeks to analyse the actual success (or results) of Eco-Cities towards sustainable development. The general consensus reflected amongst the literature however is that the present patterns of urbanization are unsustainable. The other major theme within the spatial research work carried out in China is the urban-rural divide, which Zhang & Kanbur (2001) describe as the equivalent of the white-black divide in the US. The common thread among many pieces of work under this theme is the identification of the role of public policy in perpetuating this divide and creating conditions that foster urban-rural migration, through the hukou system of the rural-urban population polarization (Chan & Zhang, 1999), the gap in basic education provision between urban and rural areas (Hannum, 1999), and urban-biased policies that deepen income inequality (Yang, 1999) The general impression that is inferred from these findings, is that the urban-rural divide is to a large extent a political and policy construct, and that the lack of development in rural areas compared to the urban areas is largely due to a much larger proportion of resources being poured into the latter. It may be due to the influence of such political and policy inclinations that there is almost no research conducted into the sustainability of the rural areas nor attempts to create sustainable visions of the village as the Eco-Cities do for the urban areas. In fact, the only initiative in this direction that could be found was the SUCCESS project undertaken as a joint collaborative between researchers from China and the European Union which carried out research into the sustainable future of Chinese villages.

CP0314 Research Project Candidate Name/Number: Foo Cexiang / 0602721


Self-sustaining Villages as Sustainable Development in China: Case Study of Xin Jian Tibetan Village, Yunnan

SUCCESS Project: Sustainable future of Chinese villages This extensive and resource-intensive project, piloted in 7 case study villages across China (Marschalek, 2008), took the village as the model of sustainability, and defined sustainability as a local, informed, participatory, balance-seeking process, operating within a Sustainable Area Budget, exporting no harmful imbalances beyond its territory or into the future, thus opening the spaces of opportunity and possibility. (Levine et al., 1999) In many ways, this paper shares the same theoretical propositions and philosophical beliefs as the SUCCESS project, especially in its conviction towards sustainable villages built upon the foundations of local self-initiatives, where external parties such as the state and researchers play a facilitating, rather than pre-determining role. It involved a participatory process between researchers and villagers, through which future images and scenarios emerged, giving rural areas and their inhabitants a new and sustainable role for China in the new millennium. (Dumreicher, 2008) Attention was also given to the subjective meaning of places as social spaces to the villagers, through innovative use of photo interviews (Dumreicher & Kolb, 2008). The processes and methodologies used by the SUCCESS project team were thus able to give very strong insights into the potential of villages to become sustainable. However, due to its definition of sustainability as a process, the project is limited in terms of producing evidence on the sustainability of the Chinese villages that is measurable. Hence, while the project produces qualitative results which indicate an increase in the villagers awareness of sustainability issues and development of their self-confidence (Dumreicher, 2008), there is no collection of quantitative data of any kind. This paper believes that this will limit the potential of the project itself in influencing any form of policy change in China towards viewing villages as a sustainable model of spatial development. The potential influence on policy-makers is a key objective of this paper as I believe that without such a shift in policy thinking, local governments will not provide the basic infrastructure and utilities necessary for villages to become sustainable. The resources poured into the SUCCESS case studies can hardly be expected to be replicated across the thousands of villages in China.

CP0314 Research Project Candidate Name/Number: Foo Cexiang / 0602721


Self-sustaining Villages as Sustainable Development in China: Case Study of Xin Jian Tibetan Village, Yunnan

2.3

Well-Being

Subjective Well-Being There are three distinguishable approaches within the existing literature towards the concept wellbeing and the measurement of it. (CMEPSP, 2009) Out of these, the first approach of subjective well-being stands in philosophical contrast with the other two approaches of capabilities and fair allocations. The latter two approaches rely on objective attributes of each person in measuring their well-being, whereas the subjective well-being approach considers the self-evaluation and feelings of individuals in their own lives as the sole all-encompassing measure of well-being, of which objective attributes have only an instrumental role. The concept of subjective well-being comes from the philosophical tradition which views individuals as the best judges of their own conditions. The view that subjective well-being or happiness as commonly defined should be the key measurement of well-being and hence the key aim of development has been argued for and supported by some authors (Layard, 2005; Nordhaus & Tobin quoting Erlich, 1973 ). This paper will take a similar view. The case for well-being to be the key aim of development has already been made by this paper in the introductory chapter. There are two key reasons extracted from the literature which convinced me to the view that subjective well-being provides the clearest and most representative concept of well-being. The first of this is that happiness is an ultimate goal, a self-evident good. (Layard, 2005:113) This becomes obvious when compared to other objective attributes such as health, education and material possessions which all are valuable only when they contribute towards happiness. Research which shows that people in Western societies have not got happier even as they have got richer adds to this perspective. (Layard, 2005:3) The second reason is that while subjective well-being is a normative attribute which has no objective counterpart, a rich list of literature has concluded on its ability to predict peoples behaviour (e.g. workers who report more dissatisfaction in their work are more likely to quit their job) (CMEPSP, 2009). Significantly, subjective well-being measures have been found to strongly correlate with a range of other information, especially various physiological and medical criteria (Ryff & Singer, 2003; Rosencranz, 2003) and individual characteristics such as signs of cheerfulness (Diener & Suh, 1999), sociability and exclusion (Frey & Stutzer, 2000).

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CP0314 Research Project Candidate Name/Number: Foo Cexiang / 0602721


Self-sustaining Villages as Sustainable Development in China: Case Study of Xin Jian Tibetan Village, Yunnan

Having identified subjective well-being as the most representative approach of well-being, the literature review must now examine the various methods this can be measured. The most common method in the literature is the self-evaluation of life satisfaction. This is normally done through getting respondents to answer the simple question All things considered, how satisfied are you with your life as a whole these days on a scale of 1 to 10. International surveys such as the Gallup World Poll have carried out such an exercise and analysed the results. (Deaton, 2007) This provides a tool using which comparison can be made between Xin Jian Tibetan Village and the overall Chinese average. Repeated surveys conducted on the same group can also provide a general trajectory of the levels of well-being over time. The other method used is the Day Reconstruction method, which seeks to measure the proportion of time an individual spends in an unpleasant state by running through the emotions he experiences for every significant activity in a day. This is normally done using a structured questionnaire form which requires individuals to re-construct events and feelings from the previous day. (Kahneman et.al, 2006) While more complicated than the first, it allows direct subjective well-being comparison to be made between individuals, as a person who spends proportionately more time in a pleasant state each day can be viewed as happier than someone who spends less so. The life evaluation method does not allow such direct comparison as there may be personal differences in the use of the scale, i.e. a score of 6 by John cannot be compared against a score of 7 by Jerry. The Day Reconstruction method also allows the researcher to gain an insight into the effect of particular activities and places on the happiness of the respondent, from which further research can be made. Objective Attributes Shaping Well-Being While subjective well-being provides reflective and comparative tools for the measurement of wellbeing, its normative approach provides no theoretical proposition from which any policy can be guided upon, i.e. it does not inform on how levels of well-being can be improved. To do this, the research will still need to turn to the objective approaches, which while not providing the overall picture, do surface the contributing factors which impact upon levels of well-being. The US General Social Survey has shown the top seven factors affecting happiness to be as follows: family relationships, financial situation, work, community and friends, health, personal freedom and personal values. (Layard, 2005:63)

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CP0314 Research Project Candidate Name/Number: Foo Cexiang / 0602721


Self-sustaining Villages as Sustainable Development in China: Case Study of Xin Jian Tibetan Village, Yunnan

Differences in family situations have a huge impact on happiness levels. Results from the German Socio-Economic Panel have found that marriage is a significant indicator of this and that people generally become happier as a result of marriage, and this is true for both men and women. (Clark et.al, 2003) Work employment is another major factor influencing happiness, and research has shown that this goes beyond the income benefits derived from work. The psychological impact of going out of employment has been shown to reduce happiness directly by destroying self-respect and the social relationships created at work. The pain of unemployment is thus higher, relative to the pain of losing income alone. (Layard, 2005:67) Community and friends provide the setting in which individuals are able to find security and inclusion. Built on the quality of trust within such communities, these have a direct impact on the quality of such communities, or social capital and contribute to happiness levels. (Putnam, 2000) Health has never emerged as the most important determinant of happiness in research conducted (Michalos, 2003), and this might be because individuals are able to adapt to physical limitations to a large extent. However, psychologically-induced effects from mental illness and chronic pain cannot be adapted to (Federick and Loewenstein, 1999), and are significant determinants of happiness. The importance of psychological impacts on the factors mentioned above has been clearly shown. No where is it more directly expressed however, than through the factor of personal values or the individual philosophy of life. Individuals who are able to appreciate what they have and refrain from self-comparison with others are naturally happier than other individuals. The psychologist Daniel Goleman has stated that it is possible for individuals to be taught and gain control over their moods in his paper on emotional intelligence. (Goleman, 1996) Another way individuals derive optimism in their lives besides methods of mind-control is through religious belief. Research has shown that belief is a factor of happiness as well (Soroka et.al, 2003), as part of the wider framework of personal values. The final factor of personal freedom is closely linked to the concepts of political voice and governance. The amount of participation individuals have as citizens within the political process and the extent to which they are involved in the decision-making over their own affairs are crucial to their happiness levels. This is reflected through a range of research studies, comparing Communist and post-Communist states, and intra-nation comparisons between the cantons of Switzerland. The common conclusion is that citizens with greater autonomy and rights to decision-making are happier. (Layard, 2005:70)

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CP0314 Research Project Candidate Name/Number: Foo Cexiang / 0602721


Self-sustaining Villages as Sustainable Development in China: Case Study of Xin Jian Tibetan Village, Yunnan

Amartya Sen (1999) provides a strong theoretical underpinning to this factor of personal freedom in his seminal work Development as Freedom, which broadens the scope of perspective from the individual towards the wider community. Coming from the capabilities approach of well-being, he states that it is only the emancipation of people to choose the lives they have reason to lead that constitutes development. He argues for the role of the state to provide citizens with the basic rights of water, sanitation and education, but from which they are then given the freedom to determine and lead their own chosen ways of life. This provides a strong theoretical foundation for purposes of this entire paper as it purports the view of bottom-up expressions of development with the state limited to the role of providing basic rights, which is the underlying theory of the self-sustaining village. The sustainability of such development has in its inherent makeup clear considerations of all social, environmental and economic dimensions. This is in marked contrast to the top-down approach states take in collaboration with multi-national design and engineering firms when deciding for citizens the ways and places they should live in, limited to a concept of sustainability which revolves mainly around economic and to a lesser extent environmental concerns. Table 2.1 summarises the indicators within these factors that have the most significant effect on happiness. These indicators provide the theoretical propositions with which the data collected for the case study can be analysed upon. The detailed methodology is described in the following chapter.
Table 2.1 Key objective indicators of well-being

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CP0314 Research Project Candidate Name/Number: Foo Cexiang / 0602721


Self-sustaining Villages as Sustainable Development in China: Case Study of Xin Jian Tibetan Village, Yunnan

2.4

Sustainability

The literature review separates the topic of sustainability from well-being as the paper views the measurement of these two components to be complementary and hence, must be examined and reflected separately. In its report, the CMEPSP (2009) explain the confusion of trying to combine the measurement of both concepts by a single indicator. The key reason is that while well-being is a flow concept, sustainability should be understood as a stock concept that should reflect the simultaneous preservation or increase in several stocks: quantities and qualities of natural resources, and of human, and social and physical capital. Sens theory of development as freedom explained in the preceding section is an important theory on the preservation and improvement in social capital seen in this context. It is through the processes of developing their own futures and lifestyles in which communities are able to develop their social capital and build up other social capabilities. This final section of the literature review will thus go on to review the factors which affect the stock of natural resources. Instead of looking for an approach that simply produces a figure for the measurement of sustainability, this report requires one which identifies factors which have a significant impact on the stock of natural resources. Hence, while attempts at dashboard indicators (OECD), composite indices (ESI) and adjusted GDPs are acknowledged, it is the work of Footprint Accounting which produces the most useful theories for the purpose of this paper. Research figures from the Report on Ecological Footprint in China (WWF, 2008) showed that the per capita footprint of rural dwellers was almost 5.0 gha less than their urban counterparts in Yunnan. While this will reflect the sustainability of Xin Jian Tibetan village in good light, the research will require the theoretical causes for such a phenomenon to provide a comprehensive picture. Taking reference from the work of the Stockholm Environmental Institute on the Ecological Footprint in Wales (2005), five key sectors were identified as to have a significant impact on the earths stock of natural resources. These were: food and drink, waste, transport, energy and housing. While these results are specific to Wales, they are generally applicable and should provide some reference for sustainability in China (for which there is no existing data). Table 2.2 summarises these results.

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CP0314 Research Project Candidate Name/Number: Foo Cexiang / 0602721


Self-sustaining Villages as Sustainable Development in China: Case Study of Xin Jian Tibetan Village, Yunnan

Table 2.2 Key factors influencing environmental sustainability

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CP0314 Research Project Candidate Name/Number: Foo Cexiang / 0602721


Self-sustaining Villages as Sustainable Development in China: Case Study of Xin Jian Tibetan Village, Yunnan

3
3.1

Methodology
Philosophical Perspective of The Case Study

Despite its prevalence in social science research, the case study has received much criticism as a research method lacking in both objectivity and rigour, useful perhaps as an exploratory strategy, but inadequate as an explanatory one. As a research method, the case study fails to fall neatly into the clearly categorised dichotomy of qualitative and quantitative methods, each underpinned by its own philosophical belief of how the world should be understood. This problematic position within the dichotomy is probably one of the reasons for the negative perception of the case study, leaving it supported by neither the positive objectivity to discover natural laws associated with the quantitative methods, nor the rigorous investigation of meaning attributed to causal processes (Hanson & Platt, 2003) by qualitative methods. The lack of philosophical clarity is translated into a prejudice towards the research design of case studies as a rather arbitrary makeup open to the whims of each researcher, without any distinguishable line of method or logic. This has led to the case study being stereotyped as a weak sibling among social science methods (Yin, 1994:xiii), unlikely to gain credence towards any wider understanding of the world beyond its narrow and specific definitions of the case, nor provide any findings credible enough for any form of policy to be based upon. Before starting on the case study proper then, it is critical for this paper to address the criticisms of the case study method, and provide an explanation for its selection as the research method for this paper. As a research method, the case method utilizes both qualitative and quantitative evidence. This however, is less a reflection of a lack of philosophical underpinning, than a strong statement on it. It is my belief that the world can only be understood in its entirety when both contexts, and the natural laws that the contexts generate, are considered in relation. This relational understanding of the world can be contrasted to an objective understanding of the world made up of simply natural laws, or a relative understanding where meanings can only be derived from the contextual nature of causal processes. The relational understanding of the world, derived from studies in the understanding of space, internalizes both the generalizing abstract qualities of the world, and the specificities of particular contexts. (Harris & Hooper, 2004)

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Self-sustaining Villages as Sustainable Development in China: Case Study of Xin Jian Tibetan Village, Yunnan

Under such an understanding, the debate between qualitative and quantitative methods becomes redundant through an internalization of both into a holistic understanding of the world. The combination of quantitative and qualitative methods within case studies is not then an arbitrary juxtaposition of inherently contradicting methods, but a natural consideration of all relevant evidence towards common propositions. Having explained the philosophical underpinnings of the case study, it is now left to the paper to explain the choice of it as an appropriate research method and illustrate a research methodology that proves logical in providing explanatory arguments.

3.2

Principles of the Case Study

The section on the philosophical perspective behind the case study would have suggested its appropriateness in researching into phenomena which cannot be extracted from their context, and must be investigated within that context. In his comparison of the relevant situations for different research strategies, Yin identifies the following situation for which the case study has a distinct advantage over other strategies (experiments, surveys, archival analysis, histories): A how of why question is being asked about a contemporary set of events over which the investigator has little or no control. (Yin, 1994:9) Combining the philosophical and practical perspectives, the case study emerges as a research method which allows the researcher to cope with situations where there are many variables of interest that cannot be distinguished from contemporary context, and which he needs to provide explanatory answers beyond mere frequencies and incidence. The unique multi-dimensional approach of the case study and its research methodology provides the two key reasons for this. Firstly, by relying on the triangular convergence of data from multiple sources of evidence, the case study allows the researcher to fully comprehend the context and its interaction with the phenomena under study, without having to isolate individual variables of the context which may interact with each other as well. Quantitative methods such as linear regressions seek to overcome this by correlating variables with each other to sieve out these potential interactions which will affect the statistical results. However, they are limited to variables of a quantifiable nature, which is not always the natural way in which variables present themselves.

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Self-sustaining Villages as Sustainable Development in China: Case Study of Xin Jian Tibetan Village, Yunnan

Secondly, the case study relies on the confirmation or rejection of prior developed theoretical propositions as part of its explanation-building process during data analysis. This is an important distinction from qualitative methods which avoid the specification of any theoretical proposition at the outset of any research study. Unlike qualitative methods which seek to derive theory from the data collected, the case study starts of from a very different angle of seeking to validate or refute pre-formed theoretical propositions in the building of an explanation for any phenomenon. It is this data analysis strategy of explanation-building that allows the case study to provide explanatory answers through an expansion and generalization of theory. The generalizations that case studies provide, are then achieved through a rigorous analytic process, rather than an enumeration of frequencies through any statistical manner.

3.3

Case Study Research Strategy Outline

It should be evident now that the case study is an all-encompassing research method not only in its use of multiple sources of evidence (Fig 3.1), but through its entire research design from the outset of identifying theoretical propositions, to data collection with these propositions in mind, to the data analysis of building explanations from these propositions. This is thus a comprehensive research strategy, of which the research design plays a pivotal role. A detailed explanation of the individual elements within the case study research strategy is provided in Appendix A, while Figure 3.2 illustrates the entire process through a flow-chart.

Figure 3.1 Convergence of Multiple Sources of Evidence Source: Recreation with alteration from COSMOS Corporation, (Yin, 1994:93)

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Self-sustaining Villages as Sustainable Development in China: Case Study of Xin Jian Tibetan Village, Yunnan

Figure 3.2 Case Study Strategy

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3.4

Research Project Design

This section will first provide a summary of the papers research questions, main proposition and unit of analysis. The main details of these have been explained under the introductory chapter. It will also refer to the list of secondary theoretical propositions which have been identified in the literature review chapter. (See Table 2.1)The key function of this section then will be to describe and explain the multiple sources of evidence that it will seek out for data collection and analysis. Research Questions The research question posed by the paper is: How sustainable is the self-sustaining village as a model of spatial development? By including the definition of sustainable development within the research question, it can then be understood as how sustainable is the self-sustaining village as a model of spatial development in achieving sustainable levels of well-being? The research question can be approached from both an exploratory and explanatory perspective. The exploratory perspective will require a cross-comparative approach of the well-being and sustainability of the self-sustaining village with other models of spatial development in China. This will require data of a quantitative nature. The explanatory perspective of the question then builds upon the findings of the exploratory one and seeks to identify the causal elements that explain the well-being and sustainability of the selfsustaining village. To produce an answer of this nature, the paper needs to draw upon multiple sources of evidence, including the quantitative conclusions from the first perspective, as the relational approach of the case study method requires. These sources and the way data from them is analysed will be explained below. Main Proposition The papers main proposition is that: the self-sustaining village can be a sustainable model of spatial development in achieving sustainable levels of well-being, provided the conditions for it to be so are in place. The paper will need to produce evidence to support this claim, and identify what the necessary conditions are. This is done with influencing policy-decisions as an objective in mind.

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Self-sustaining Villages as Sustainable Development in China: Case Study of Xin Jian Tibetan Village, Yunnan

Unit of Analysis Xin Jian Tibetan Village in Shangri-la County of Diqing Tibetan Autonomous Prefecture, in Yunnan Province, China is the designated unit of analysis. This spatial definition of the unit of analysis is important, for it is clear that the research seeks to understand the village not just through the villagers, but through their interaction with their natural and built surroundings. Hence, the village is researched into as a holistic expression of space and place. The unique phenomenon of Xin Jian Tibetan Village being a self-sustaining village that has received infrastructural support from the Chinese local government has been explained under the introductory chapter. The revelatory nature of this research into Xin Jian has also been made possible through a local contact within the village, which facilitated research into what had previously been a rather inaccessible village, both physically and in terms of language communication. These have been the key reasons for the selection of Xin Jian Tibetan Village as the unit of analysis. Data Collection & Analysis The need for multiple sources of evidence for the case study has been much emphasised, however, in answering the exploratory perspective, a quantitative approach is taken. This is due to the need for the research to be able to compare the levels of subjective well-being between inhabitants of Xin Jian Tibetan Village with the general population of China. To do this, a comparative tool is needed and for purposes of this research, three tools were selected. The first is formed by results from the Gallup World Poll 2008, which calculated a life satisfaction score for 143 countries all over the world using the question All things considered, how satisfied are you with your life as a whole these days? The second tool takes the results of the nation-wide Gallup survey for China conducted in 2005, which required respondents to answer the question of Overall, how satisfied or dissatisfied are you with the way things are going in your life today?. The third tool draws upon research by Kahneman et.al. (2004) in China, which required respondents to reflect on their present life satisfaction in comparison with 15 years ago. An exact replication of the questions from these three tools were asked in survey form to the sample group of local inhabitants from Xin Jian Tibetan Village, and the results were then compared to those for the national Chinese average, to provide an indication of the relation between well-being levels in Xin Jian with the national Chinese average.

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Self-sustaining Villages as Sustainable Development in China: Case Study of Xin Jian Tibetan Village, Yunnan

In providing an explanatory answer, the research then draws upon six different sources of evidence, in the form of: documents, surveys, physical artifacts, open-ended interviews, focused interviews, observation (direct and participative). The main documents analysed were the Five Year Development Plan and Five Year Agricultural Plan of the Shangri-la County Government. The significance of these have been explained in the introductory chapter highlighting the support of the local government in terms of providing infrastructure and amenities including electricity and clean water to the inhabitants of Xin Jian. The surveys used have been described above, and the results from which were also taken in consideration at data analysis level. The main physical artifacts researched into were the houses in which the inhabitants lived in, as well as the farms on which they worked. The focused interviews drew upon a set of questions that allowed inhabitants to reconstruct their feelings experienced in the previous day (as used by Kahneman et.al, 2004 and elaborated in the literature review chapter), and link these feelings to the activities they were involved in at the time as well as the locations these took place in. The final two sources of evidence (open-ended conversations and observations) took in the general mood and attitudes of the inhabitants of Xin Jian as I interacted with them for two full days. The data collected from all these six sources were guided by the set of theoretical propositions identified in the literature review chapter. These included a range of individual and societal theories on well-being and development, as well as spatial theories of sustainable development. (Refer to Table 2.1 and 2.2 for a summary of these theories) Informed by the contribution of the data collected towards these theories, the paper then forms an overall explanation for the sustainability of the self-sustaining village. From this explanation, key implications for policy are then identified and elaborated upon in the concluding chapter of the report.

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4
4.1

Data Collection & Analysis


Overview

Instead of having the data collection and analysis as two separate chapters, the report amalgamates both within one section as both will need to be understood in light of the other. Hence, key observations made during the data collection process would form part of critical information for the data analysis and the data analysis can only be understood within the wider data collection framework. The data was collected from six specific sources: the developmental plans of the local county government (documents), the Tibetan houses and farms (physical artifacts), evaluative surveys on life satisfaction, structured interviews using the Day Construction Method, open-ended conversations with the villagers and observations made on their ways-of-life. Out of these six sources, the evaluative surveys on life satisfaction were conducted with the explicit objective of providing a quantitative comparison basis between the subjective well-being levels in Xin Jian Tibetan village and the overall average for the Peoples Republic of China. The remaining five sources were to be used as part of a general explanatory framework to explore the sustainability of the levels of well-being in the village. The chapter will begin first with establishing the levels of subjective well-being.

4.2

Evaluative Surveys on Life Satisfaction

Background & Setting

population of 370. The evaluative surveys on life satisfaction were carried out for 20 people (or 5.50% of the total population), representing 8 households (15.10% of the total number of households). It is recognized that this is hardly a representative percentage, however, it was the best possible within the resources available to the research. In an attempt to make up for the small sample size, a conscious attempt was made to select a sample population made up of villagers across a range of ages and gender. The final sample population was made up of 9 men and 11 women, across an age range from 16 years to 67 years old. Again, it must be qualified that this was not proportionate to the overall population

) within Shangri-la County (

Xin Jian Tibetan Village (

), located in a wider geographical area known as Little Zhongdian ) is made up of 53 households, consisting a total

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Self-sustaining Villages as Sustainable Development in China: Case Study of Xin Jian Tibetan Village, Yunnan

demographics, of which there was no information on. Nevertheless, the sample population achieved the aim of gathering responses across almost every generational decade (from the teenagers to the people in the sixties) and gender. The only exception to this would be young children of primary schooling age. This was because they were having lessons in the village school on both the days when the survey was conducted and I did not wish to interrupt the lessons. It is recognized though, that data from this sector of the population would have provided important further insight, a point elaborated under the concluding chapter of the report. All the surveys were conducted on location in the village, where I moved from household to household and the fields in which the villagers were working on. I conducted the surveys verbally in Mandarin and relied on a local interpreter for the majority of instances in which the respondents were only conversant in Tibetan. A unique phenomenon under which these surveys were conducted was that they were mostly done in group-settings. While I asked respondents individually for their responses, their family members (in the households) and fellow villagers (in the fields) would crowd round to watch, whom the respondents would then also engage in conversations with about the questions I posed. (Fig 4.1) It is possible then, that some of the respondents would have been influenced in their answers by their family and friends. While conducting interviews under individual privacy would have overcome this problem, I felt that doing so would go against the general atmosphere within the village, under which much was done through consensus and community. I did not wish to inject an alien style of communication into my research which might have caused discomfort to the villagers. In retrospect, the informal procedures and familiarity of the settings to the villagers in which the surveys were conducted were perhaps helpful for the research in deriving free-flowing and open responses from them, beyond the sometimes narrow and direct scope of my questions. This will be elaborated under the sections on the interviews. The other significance of conducting the surveys under group-settings was that it was likely that other members of the group, who were not interviewed, probably shared the same views and opinions as those actually being surveyed. This could be inferred by the nods of agreement all around as the respondents gave me their responses. The results from the 20 people surveyed would probably then be reflective beyond the 20 people themselves into their wider circle within what was a very closely-knit community.

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Self-sustaining Villages as Sustainable Development in China: Case Study of Xin Jian Tibetan Village, Yunnan

Figure 4.1 Typical Survey and Interview Setting

Current Subjective Well-Being Levels The surveys contained basic demographic questions on age, gender, years of education, household size; and three specific questions pertaining to subjective well-being. The questions were formulated based on three surveys previously conducted to measure life satisfaction. (The database of results can be found under Appendix B.) The first of this was the Gallup World Poll 2008, which calculated a life satisfaction score for 143 countries all over the world using the question All things considered, how satisfied are you with your life as a whole these days?, whereby responses were made on a numeric scale from 0 to 10, where 0 was dissatisfied, and 10 was satisfied. The national score for the Peoples Republic of China from this survey was 6.7, while the highest national score for any one country was a score of 8.5 for Costa Rica. An exactly similar question was asked for the survey in Xin Jian Tibetan village and the average score of life satisfaction calculated was 9.25. This was much higher than the Chinese national average of 6.7. The majority of respondents (65%) responded with perfect scores of 10, while the lowest score among the entire sample population was 7. The second question was based upon a nation-wide Gallup survey for China conducted in 2005, which required respondents to answer the question of Overall, how satisfied or dissatisfied are you with the way things are going in your life today? with the five option categories of very satisfied, satisfied, somewhat dissatisfied, very dissatisfied. This question sought to measure subjective wellbeing as well, albeit through a conceptual approach of satisfaction, rather than the numerical approach of the first. The results from that survey showed 63% of respondents being satisfied (51% were satisfied and 12% were very satisfied), and 37% of respondents being unsatisfied (29% were somewhat dissatisfied and 8% were very unsatisfied).

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Self-sustaining Villages as Sustainable Development in China: Case Study of Xin Jian Tibetan Village, Yunnan

For the exact similar question posed to the respondents in Xin Jian village, 100% of respondents reflected being satisfied (including both satisfied and very satisfied) with the way things were going in their life currently, of which 60% of them were very satisfied. This was again, much higher than the overall satisfaction level of China. It is recognised that any form of cross-country comparison of life satisfaction based on these survey questions would be difficult due to differences in cross-cultural interpretations of life satisfaction. For example, where placed under exactly similar life circumstances, a Costa Rican may be predisposed to give a higher life satisfaction score than a Chinese for a range of cultural reasons. Similarly, little could be substantively concluded by comparing the average score of Xin Jian with Costa Rica. However, as Xin Jian Tibetan village is a part of the Peoples Republic of China, its score would have been taken into consideration when measuring the score for the entire country. Therefore, while it was completely conceivable that the Tibetans were culturally more pre-disposed towards happiness than the average Chinese (of which the Han ethnic group was the majority), it was possible to infer from the results from this survey that respondents from Xin Jian village would have made a positive contribution to the overall Chinese score as they were above the national average. Time Analysis of Subjective Well-Being A further third question was posed in the survey and it required respondents to reflect on their present life satisfaction in comparison with 15 years ago. They were required to select from 5 option categories: present much worse than past, present worse than past, present similar to past, present better than past, present much better than past. The basis for this question was the findings from Kahneman et.al (2004) that in spite Chinas remarkable economic growth from 1994 to 2005 with real income per capita increasing by a factor of 2.5, the percentage of people stating dissatisfaction in life had increased and the corresponding proportion stating satisfaction had decreased. The results from the survey in Xin Jian however, showed a completely opposite picture. 100% of respondents chose the option that the present was much better than the past. While no quantitative survey was made to ascertain if material conditions had improved in Xin Jian Tibetan village, the material possessions of the households (telephones and televisions) as opposed to the lack of these 15 years ago provided evidence to suggest that they had. Hence, there seemed to be a positive relationship between improvements in material conditions with subjective well-being.

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Self-sustaining Villages as Sustainable Development in China: Case Study of Xin Jian Tibetan Village, Yunnan

Conclusions The findings from the surveys suggest two conclusions: that the villagers of Xin Jian Tibetan village have considerably higher levels of subjective well-being (and hence well-being) than the average Chinese national; and that an improvement in material conditions has had a greater and positive impact to their well-being than it has on the average Chinese national. This report feels that these conclusions should post important implications for policy makers in China. Firstly, a policy of urban migration for rural settlers implemented in villages such as Xin Jian would have a immediate negative effect on average standards of well-being, as they currently have a positive, rather than negative impact on the national average. Viewing well-being as the key indicator and objective of development, such a policy would effectively be going backwards rather than forward. Secondly, the material improvements made possible by state provision of infrastructure (electricity and clean water) has a more positive impact on well-being in villages such as Xin Jian than in other areas. This can be understood as a more effective and efficient usage of state resources. While the survey results are significant for the current assessment of well-being in Xin Jian, they do not provide any information on the sustainability of such levels of well-being. It is to this which the next sections turn to.

4.3

Physical Artifacts

The Tibetan House Set amidst beautiful scenery of a running stream against the backdrop of forested hills, the village of Xin Jian is a collection of Tibetan Houses dotted all over a plateau. (Fig.4.2) The sight of the

remarkable landscape to the unknowing visitor, but actually carries huge significance to the local Tibetan community. The early settlers of Xin Jian selected this location to establish their village precisely because of its proximity and views to the Snow Mountains, which the community regards to this day as a sacred Holy mountain to be revered.

Haba Snow Mountains (

) from the village may just have been another facet of the

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Self-sustaining Villages as Sustainable Development in China: Case Study of Xin Jian Tibetan Village, Yunnan

Figure 4.2 Location of the village

The Tibetan Houses in the village have a distinct architecture and functionality that differentiate them from typical village houses that can be found in other parts of China. The ground floor of each house was an open-air grass-filled courtyard which traditionally had been where the livestock (cows, pigs and chicken) of the household was kept in the night. (Fig 4.3) The first floor housed the living quarters of the house, with a living room and the sleeping quarters. An open-air corridor extended outside the first floor and along the front of the house, overlooking the courtyard on the ground floor. The corridor was used for domestic outdoor activities including the drying of clothes and footstock. The third storey or open-top of the house housed the altar room, where the statues and tangkas (mineral paintings) of Tibetan Buddhist deities were placed. This three-fold segregation was based on the Buddhist belief in the different spheres of being, with the heavenly realm at the top, the human realm in the middle, and the animal realm beneath it. It was explained to me that the structure and positioning of all Tibetan Houses were made in strict accordance to natural conditions, such that it would be cool during summer and blocked from the cold winds during winter. I also noticed that though rather dim, the entire house was lit by natural sunlight during the day through the windows. All the houses were made from local materials, primarily consisting of mud walls lined with straw and wooden buildings. While the building materials were simple, the architecture of every individual building was highly elaborate. Externally, the roof, windows and doors were wood carved with intricate images of animals and flowers, while the internal walls were painted with colourful images of auspicious symbols from Tibetan Buddhism and flora which can be found on the Snow Mountain. (Fig 4.4) These wood carvings and paintings carried a symbolic significance that was believed to usher in good luck and also reflected the close relationship the locals share with nature.

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Self-sustaining Villages as Sustainable Development in China: Case Study of Xin Jian Tibetan Village, Yunnan

Figure 4.3 Courtyard of the Tibetan House

Figure 4.4 Wood carvings on the exterior of the house

Village Farms The main farming activities the village undertook were crop growing (barley, a local staple food was the main crop) and livestock rearing (free roaming chicken, pigs and cows). The use of technology on the farms was minimal, and the only hint of mechanization was the tractor. Farming methods employed were largely labour intensive, and the harvesting season was in full progress during my visit. The barley were laid out onto huge wooden structures to sun. When ripe for harvesting, the villagers would climb atop these structures to take down the barley, before sieving out the grains. The main farming tools were the basic ploughs, shovels and bamboo baskets. (Fig 4.5)

Figure 4.5 Harvesting the barley

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Self-sustaining Villages as Sustainable Development in China: Case Study of Xin Jian Tibetan Village, Yunnan

Conclusions The analysis of the physical artifacts in Xin Jian Tibetan village produced important evidence towards both the well-being and sustainability theoretical propositions. Firstly, the location, layout and decorative elements of the Tibetan house all reflect the strong religious belief the villagers have of their images of Buddhism and nature. This contributes to the theory on the significance religious beliefs have on well-being, considering the high levels of well-being enjoyed by the villagers. In terms of sustainability, there are noticeable passive design elements in the architecture and layout of the Tibetan houses that have gained prominence once again in todays paradigm of green architecture. The contribution of such elements in reducing energy usage for lighting and heating has been noted as the key reasons for their promulgation. The literature review has identified the use of local materials in building construction to have a smaller ecological footprint and lesser drain on the earths natural resources. The fact that all houses in Xin Jian are built using local resources and local manpower should count significantly in the overall assessment of its sustainability. Finally, the use of traditional, labour-intensive farming methods, whilst limiting the productivity of the farms, gives two important advantages as well: firstly, they provide employment opportunities for the villagers (and while they may not be rewarded in terms of pecuniary allocations, it is the importance to self-esteem and social relationships, and hence well-being, as reflected in the literature review that should take precedence here.) Secondly, such farming methods will have a much more benign effect on the environment in terms of carbon emissions.

4.4

Observations

Food in the Village On the day I arrived in the village, my host family had just conducted the slaughter of three pigs. The slaughter had been carried out before I arrived, but the villagers were in the midst of the postslaughter processing when I entered the house. The men were dissecting the animals and separating the meat from the rest of the carcass. The ribs and other bony parts of the pig were then hooked onto the ceiling and left to sun. The women were stuffing the organs of the pig with a mixture of pig blood and rice, forming a type of sausage. There was a clear division of work between the men and women in this operation and no part of the pig was left to waste. (Fig 4.6 and 4.7) One pig can last a household of six through the winter. I was to learn subsequently.

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Self-sustaining Villages as Sustainable Development in China: Case Study of Xin Jian Tibetan Village, Yunnan

Figure 4.6 Men dissecting the carcass

Figure 4.7 Women filling the pig intestines

Lunch was served in the living room, which was dominated by a central heating stove. The stove was connected to a chimney that ran through to the top of the house, and was heated up by the burning of wood. Instead of just being a fireplace, this central heating stove was a hallmark of all Tibetan homes and served three important functions: first, it was the main source of heat for the entire household during the cold seasons. Second, it was used as a stove to boil water, and cook food. Third, and linked to the first two reasons, it was the traditional focal point for family interaction within the house where members of the family sat around and had meals or conversations. Lunch was made up of the fried pork which had just been slaughtered, as well as other traditional Tibetan fare. The main staple of the villagers was tsamba, a form of roasted barley flour rich in protein, minerals and Vitamin B. This was taken together with yak butter tea, which was made by churning tea leaves, yak butter and salt. Another important element of the Tibetan diet was a type of rice wine known as qingkejiu made from hullessbarley (a type of barley), drunk during major festive occasions or when guests visited. Taken together, the diet gave a good mix of carbohydrates, protein and fibre, essential to the daily body needs. A key feature of all the food however, was that they were all grown and processed locally in the village. This included the rearing of yak and manufacturing of the yak butter, the growing and harvest of hullessbarley, the fermentation of the wine and the churning of the tea. Over lunch, I learnt that most of the villagers had four meals a day: breakfast, lunch, snack and dinner; while the more elderly would have an additional meal of supper.

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Self-sustaining Villages as Sustainable Development in China: Case Study of Xin Jian Tibetan Village, Yunnan

Relationships within Households The surveys of life evaluation had included the question on household size, and the mean (and median) household size was 6. My actual observation of the households was that they were mainly tri-generational. As explained in the section on food processing, there were clearly defined responsibilities within the household and this will be elaborated in subsequent sections. However, despite the separation of physical duties (with preparation of food solely done by the female members) the observed tone of relationships between family members of age and gender was one of openness and informality. During meal times, all family members would sit around the stove and share conversations across the stove with the frequent bursting out of laughter. There seemed to be little inhibitions on the part of any members. These basic observations are certainly limited in terms of possible conclusions that can be made from them, and the research does not purport to do so. However, they do support a general picture of cordial family relationships. Conclusions Through my observations of the food and cooking habits of the villagers, four characteristics which had significance on the pre-identified theoretical propositions of sustainability emerged. These were: the consumption of locally-produced food, zero wastage of food, the nature of the food consumed and the multi-purpose usage of the central heating stove. The smaller ecological footprint of locally-produced food due to zero transportation emissions is one of the significant factors in sustainability, while the points on food production have already been covered in the previous chapter. As I witnessed for myself, every single part of the pig was consumed or processed into other side products, without any form of wastage. Also, as all food was processed immediately on the spot before consumption or storage, no packaging in any form was necessary. The huge contribution of waste towards the ecological footprint has been highlighted, but in the village, perhaps due to the scarcity of resources previously, the traditional way-of-life had always inclined towards minimizing wastage. Thirdly, the attention paid to the Tibetan diet in terms of nutrition was observable by the food they consumed. While the research did not go into the health statistics of mortality incidence, all the villagers above sixty I met were still actively involved in the farm activities. This might perhaps be a reflection of good nutrition, as complemented by the fact that they took four meals a day. Again however, this will require much further in-depth research for there to be any firm conclusions.

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Fourthly, the multi-purpose central heating stove had several sustainability implications. To start with, it was the only source of heat within the entire house, and used pure wood as the source of energy. In terms of the ecological footprint, wood has an ecological efficiency only just inferior to the various sources of renewable energy, and much more efficient than all other fuels. Next, the total energy usage of the household was also lowered due to the dual-function usage of the central heating stove, to cook and also to heat the house up at the same time. On another note, the third function of the heating stove as the focal communal point for the family also meant that family members spent most of the time in their homes around the stove together. This provided a space within which family relationships could be built, a critical factor towards well-being.

4.5

Structured Interviews: Day Reconstruction

Background The structured interviews replicated the Day Reconstruction Method used by researchers into subjective well-being from the school of feelings and emotions. (Kahneman et.al, 2004) The interviews required respondents to reflect on the significant activities they were involved in the day before, and to give an assessment on the level of intensity they had of a list of feelings (six positive happy, capable, enjoyment, excited, calmness, warm and six negative frustrated, worried, disappointed, tired, angry, impatient) during the activities. The assessment involved giving score of 0 to 6 for every feeling in each activity, and the consolidated score positive and negative score would reflect if the activities were pleasant or unpleasant. The interviews were conducted verbally for a selected group of 7 villagers, who had also participated in the evaluative life surveys. This group was selected to cover both genders of all age groups within the village. The original usage of the Day Reconstruction Method by researchers was to quantitatively calculate the percentage of time individuals were involved in unpleasant activities (known as the U-index) to compare happiness levels between individuals. The data collected within our interviews also allowed for such a comparison. However, such a comparison will not be the approach for data analysis of the results for two reasons: firstly, a cursory scan of the results showed that all the 7 villagers reflected all their activities as pleasant and hence, their U-index score of unhappiness would have been 0%. Secondly, this data would have provided little more in way of evidence of an exploratory or explanatory nature which had not already been produced by the other sources.

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However, the information given by the respondents provided the opportunity to gain an insight into the effect of place and activity on their feelings, often supplemented through their own voluntary explanations of the feelings they experienced. This then allowed for a thematic analysis of the data in terms of the propositions of well-being and sustainability, which is the main focus of the next section. The exact results of the interviews are inserted under the Appendix C, allowing for any independent interpretation, or analysis on them beyond what is suggested by this report. Self-Esteem & Capability Two clear themes that emerged from the interviews was the high amount of self-esteem respondents gained from their work, as well as happiness derived through knowing that their work was directly contributing to the welfare of their households. All the respondents expressed a strong emotion of feeling capable when they carried out their work and this was regardless of age or gender. A thirty-eight year old male respondent commented, It takes me 3 hours to drive the tractor up the hills, 3 hours to cut the trees at the top, before another 2 hours driving the truck-load full of logs down the hills. All this is not easy work and requires skill, which is why I am proud of my work. I also take pride knowing that I can sell these logs in the market, and make money for my family. Involved in work of a very different nature, a sixty-seven year old male respondent experienced a very similar vein of emotions, Taking care of the livestock is my responsibility and I have to prepare and feed the chicken and pigs twice a day. I am happy when I feed the animals as it is what makes them grow fat, so that our family can eventually sell or eat them. This division of labour and individual responsibilities also applied to two unique individuals in the village whom I interviewed at the Barley Fields both were middle-aged women, of whom one was disabled with waist problems and another unmarried with no family. In spite of her disability, the disabled woman was involved in the barley harvesting activities together with her family. The sense of self-esteem created and social relationships formed under such working conditions were unmistakable: I am happy that in spite of my disability, I can still help out with the other women-folk here in the harvest. Even though I receive monetary assistance from the government, I still feel I can contribute to the village. I am especially happy to be working together with everyone here everyday. We talk and laugh as we work; it is a very enjoyable way to spend the day.

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Seen in light of the importance of self-esteem through employment for well-being explained in the literature review (Table 2.1), these results provide a key insight into the happiness of the villagers. Within the village, there was no concept of unemployment, as every individual of age was involved in some form of daily agricultural work. Within each household, there was a very clear division of labour. The men were primarily involved with log-cutting, while the women worked on the barley fields. The older folk were responsible for the feeding of the livestock and taking care of the younger children. The interview responses drew a strong parallel with Layards conclusions of self-respect and social relationships. (Refer to section 2.3 of the literature review) Village Social Net Through the interviews with the disabled lady and her unmarried counterpart, the existence of a village-wide social net emerged as well. It was explained to me that there were 5 unmarried women-folk in the village, an anomaly in the village. As the division of labour within each family household was clear, the 5 unmarried women who stayed alone were disadvantaged from a lack of family members in their daily livelihood. Hence, their welfare became the concern of the entire village. In the words of a fellow villager, The entire village takes care of them, be it their daily needs such as food and company, or during times where they need special assistance. The importance of this village social net to these women was evident from the way my interviewee expressed her feelings. Certainly, I worry about falling ill, and having no one to take care of me, give me medicine or bring me to a doctor. However, I am much comforted knowing that all the villagers are concerned about me and will certainly help me when I need it. I am glad they have accepted me into their families and allow me to work in the fields together with them. Without them, I think my life would be miserable, but now, I am very happy. Again, these results could be understood through the importance of social relationships and trust towards individual happiness. The strong trust the villagers had for each other, especially the disadvantaged ones, was certainly one of the key factors contributing to the high levels of wellbeing in Xin Jian Tibetan village.

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Self-sustaining Villages as Sustainable Development in China: Case Study of Xin Jian Tibetan Village, Yunnan

Religious Belief & Appreciation of Nature The other important theme that emerged from the interviews was the role of religion and nature in the lives of the villagers. Most respondents would start and end the day in meditation or prayers, and this was associated with a strong sense of calmness and serenity. Also, respondents reflected that through these prayers, a sense of goodwill was evoked for their family, their neighbours and even all beings in the world, as the basis of their prayers was compassion for all living beings. Religion was also closely intertwined with their natural surroundings and an important place of worship was the top of the hills next to the village, where the villagers had placed special relics. The village was also where most respondents spent all of their time in and an appreciation of their natural surroundings was an integral part of their happiness. Standing atop of the hills doing my cutting of trees, I sometimes look down onto the entire village. The beautiful sight of the river, the Snow Mountains, the animals and our village never fails to bring a smile to my heart. Every evening, I take my granddaughter who is five years old on walks around our village. Watching my granddaughter explore this beautiful nature, it is such an enjoyable experience for me every day. These feelings resonate strongly with the themes of personal values and family relationships identified as key to happiness levels. It could be stated that it was through this symbiotic relationships between religion, nature and the family ties within which the individual villagers found meaning and hence happiness in their lives.

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5
5.1

Conclusions
Social Sustainability: Cultural Conviction to Happiness

Having concentrated on the environmental aspects of sustainability thus far, the data analysis has made no reference to social sustainability. Through the string of evidence from multiple sources however, a broad picture of a cultural conviction to happiness clearly emerges. This conviction finds expression in their chosen way-of-life and an appreciation of the world. This was a way-of-life that can no longer be claimed to be a result of ignorance, as the villagers were exposed to images of the outside world through the television sets which could be found in every household. There were individuals within each households involved in employment outside the village, exposed to the realities of urban life. Despite all this exposure however, the underpinning motivation was still the leading of their chosen way-of-life, understood through their intimate relationship with their natural surroundings. I work in the city to earn an additional income, precisely so that the rest of my family can continue to live comfortably and work in the village. When I have earned enough, I will certainly return to the village permanently. one of the men in the village explained to me. When I posed the question of urban migration to another one of the villagers, his reply, which gained a unanimous chorus of approval from the other villagers was, We all want to stay in the village forever. Here, we have enough to eat to live happily. In the city, while there may be opportunities for some to gain great material advancement, the majority will have a problem simply making ends meet. In the city, we cannot grow our own food, and food is expensive. This conviction to happiness could best be expressed however, through the simple yet passionate responses of the women I met in the barley fields. We, Tibetans are the happiest people in the world! Harvesting the barley is the most enjoyable thing to do! Every meal is enjoyable. I remember the times when meals were much harder to come by, so every meal now is a blessing. All the different explanations and perspectives of the villagers pointed to a single conviction to lead a way-of-life which they felt was ultimately meaningful. This could perhaps be the classic empirical evidence of Amartya Sens theory of development as freedom. Through a collective identity and determination, the ability of a community to shape its own destiny and choose the lives it has reason to value is the ultimate basis for social sustainability.

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5.2

Well-Being & Environmental Sustainability

Having looked at the social aspect of sustainability, this conclusion will now summarise the key conclusions from the well-being and environmental sustainability perspectives. Firstly, the findings from the evaluative surveys on life satisfaction reflected that the level of well-being in Xin Jian Tibetan village was significantly higher than the average levels for the Peoples Republic of China. With this acting as a contributing factor in itself, the research then drew on a variety of multiple evidence sources to conclusively show that the levels of well-being in Xin Jian Tibetan village had been achieved under environmentally sustainable means. This was done through an analysis of the theoretical factors contributing to both well-being and sustainability. Significantly, the research found supporting evidence in Xin Jian for almost all the key factors contributing to both phenomena. Table 5.1 provides a synoptic review of all these findings.
Table 5.1 Summary of research evidence

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Self-sustaining Villages as Sustainable Development in China: Case Study of Xin Jian Tibetan Village, Yunnan

In addition to these evidences, the existence of the pre-requisite conditions of basic infrastructure and rights such as electricity, clean water and education were analysed and explained within the context of the local governments Development Plan in the introductory chapter of the report. Taking all the evidence throughout the report into consideration, a strong case has been made in support of the main research hypothesis: the self-sustaining village can be a sustainable model of spatial development in achieving sustainable levels of well-being, provided the conditions for it are in place. These conditions could be expressed through the ideas of Sen (1999), the giving of opportunity to the people in shaping their own destiny, through the building up of their capabilities in basic infrastructure and education, and correspondingly, a common conviction among groups of people to such self-determination.

5.3

Policy Recommendations

In the introduction to the report, the aim of influencing policy was explicitly stated. The strategy of illustrating the sustainability of self-sustaining villages to support the establishment of the selfsustaining villages as an alternative spatial development model to the Eco-City has been actively and successfully pursued throughout the report. It is with the backing of these findings that I purport two key policy recommendations:

To recognise the potential of self-sustaining villages as models of sustainable development providing a counter-weight against strategies of urban migration and linked to this;

To contribute towards the realisation of this potential through the provision of opportunities for self-determination to such rural communities , with the provision of basic infrastructure and education paramount

The report however, recognises that there will be considerable barriers to the implementation of these recommendations, the key of which will be objections to the validity of the conclusions to the report. The first of these will come against the definition of development as well-being used in the report. It is an undeniable reality that many decision and policy-makers throughout the world, and certainly in China, still see development within the restrictive paradigm of GDP growth. I have argued theoretically why this should change. To complete the argument here though, I will return to the Report of the CMEPSP. In its summary, the Committee address the report to political leaders in

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Self-sustaining Villages as Sustainable Development in China: Case Study of Xin Jian Tibetan Village, Yunnan

the world, stating that in this time of crises, when new political narratives are necessary to identify where our societies should go, the report advocates a shift of emphasis from a production-oriented measurement system to one focused on the well-being of current and future generations, It is thus a political imperative within these times of financial and environmental uncertainty, that decision makers take this bold but necessary paradigm shift in priorities. The second argument will perhaps be against the applicability of Xin Jian Tibetan Village as a model for other self-sustaining villages, indeed they might argue that the methodology of the report states that Xin Jian has been selected precisely due to its unique nature. The report identified two conditions before the sustainability of self-sustaining villages could be argued for: opportunities through basic infrastructure and education; conviction among the community itself for selfdetermination. The first condition is what the report recommends that decision-makers should implement through policy and hence this need not, and should not be unique to Xin Jian. The second condition is trickier, as the report itself has noted the unique culture of the Tibetan people. It may seem that this is a condition hardly replicable in other villages. I will refer back to the definition of self-sustaining villages given in the introduction, of villages where the dependence on food, accommodation and employment is primarily local. This is the key defining quality of such villages of which the cultural element is but one of the contributing factors. In fact, I will argue that the desire to remain in rural villages itself is an expression of self-determination. It is the lack of basic opportunities afforded to such communities that is a key reason for the exodus to the urban areas, but the aspiration to eventually return to the village is ubiquitous. It must also be clarified that cultural specificities are not limited to the Tibetan people alone, the majority of minority ethnic groups throughout China all possess unique cultural characteristics that do not fit in with the mainstream material discourse.

5.4

Wider Discussions on Sustainable Development

An increasingly common strategy which governments take in the name of sustainable development has been the utilisation of open countryside land for the generation of renewable energy. The relevance of this issue was highlighted to me through an open-ended conversation I had with one of the better informed villagers in Xin Jian. I was informed of a recent government decision to build a hydro-electric dam further up the river that ran along the village. The villagers were not consulted on the issue, and had to accept compensation offered by the government for the takeover of land next to the river. Yet, the compensation amount was below the average remuneration villagers received from growing crops on the land, directly affecting their income.

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Self-sustaining Villages as Sustainable Development in China: Case Study of Xin Jian Tibetan Village, Yunnan

There is no scope within this report to address the implications of such circumstances. It would do well though, to highlight the contested nature of the many different aspects of sustainable development, which will require much clearer principles and rules of engagement. The interface between governance and local participation should then be a key area of focus for future research into sustainability of the rural areas.

5.4

Future Research & Acknowledgements

This brings me to the final section of this paper. The entire research process from strategy design, to data collection in Xin Jian and then the writing of this report proved extremely fulfilling as I was constantly challenged logically and physically. The two main regrets of the research were the inability to gather responses from the school-going children and the limitation of only making one case study. The former is regretted as the responses of the children would have provided an important perspective on the picture of well-being due to their age and their opportunity to be schooled in a modern educational environment. While it is acknowledged that both regrets were the result of a limitation in time and resources for this research project, it is the hope that future research can address them both. It is fitting to then end this report by expressing my gratitude to the many people whom without their help and guidance, this research project would certainly have been impossible. Firstly, I would like to thank my research supervisor at Cardiff University, Prof Kevin Morgan whose guidance on relevant literature and report structure formed the framework for my entire research, and whose invaluable comments on the subsequent draft reports enabled me to constantly improve it for clarity and direction. Secondly, I would like to thank the staff and volunteers at NGO group Yunnan

accommodation and the starting point from which I could embark upon my research. Their dedication towards the promotion of local artisan products inspired me in many ways in the direction

incidentally in Shangri-la itself during one of my explorations of the local pubs. The owner of this particular pub I went into, our conversations eventually led to my main objectives in Shangri-la. He took a strong interest in my research and volunteered to link me up with the villagers in Xin Jian Tibetan village, and even accompanied me on both of my visits to the village. And last but certainly not least, I would like to thank the villagers of Xin Jian Tibetan village itself, for their hospitality in welcoming me to their homes and sharing meals, their spontaneity in answering my questions, and most importantly, for convincing me that my cause for this research was a worthy one.

of this research paper. Thirdly, I would like to thank my local contact, Mr Lin Feng (

Mountain Handicraft Centre (

) in Shangri-la who provided me with

) who I met

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Self-sustaining Villages as Sustainable Development in China: Case Study of Xin Jian Tibetan Village, Yunnan

Appendix
Case Study Research Strategy Appendix A

The research design begins with the introductory and literature review which have two important functions: firstly, to determine significant research questions for the purpose of research (and from it the main proposition); and secondly, to raise secondary theoretical propositions which the research can be based upon. The advantage of having research questions of a how or why explanatory nature has been explained in the main report. Research questions of significance are those derived from phenomenon which are important beyond their immediate context, and which little, if any research has been conducted on previously. The introductory chapter has the important role of identifying and explaining the significance of the research questions. Importantly, unlike research methods where the literature review tends to be seen as an end in itself, or a cursory review of existing literature on the topic, the case study requires a very rigorous study of literature inclusive of wider individual and societal theories which can have impact on the research topic. It is from the literature review process that the case study research selects the relevant secondary theories which form the backbone of the research. The literature review is thus a crucial means to the overall research, rather than a stand-alone end. Having identified the research question/s (and main proposition) and secondary theoretical propositions, the research will then proceed to collect data on the unit of analysis from a range of sources (both qualitative and quantitative in nature), keeping the questions and propositions in mind. The case for multiple sources has been argued in the main body, but the selection of a relevant unit of analysis must be emphasized here. The unit of analysis very much forms the context of the case study and its selection must be explained in its relevance and significance towards the research question. In particular, the research must be clear in explaining if the unit of analysis requires a spatial context or if specific to individuals or groups of individuals only. The significance of a chosen unit of analysis must be related back to the theoretical propositions as well, to test if it fulfils the critical context by which these propositions can be tested.

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Before proceeding to the data analysis stage, it is important for the researcher to consolidate all data collected into a database, which can function as a stand-alone resource from the rest of the research report. This can be in the form of interview transcripts, survey forms, or other written documents that were researched upon for the project. This allows an external party to review the data collected without being influenced by the conclusions of the researcher through his data analysis. The chosen data analysis strategy is one of explanation-building. The objective of explanationbuilding is to explain a phenomenon by stipulating a set of causal links about it. (Yin, 1994:110) This can be seen as a two-stage process which first requires the consideration of all data from multiple sources in generating conclusions that support or refute the pre-formed secondary theoretical propositions. It should be emphasized that it is the combined contribution of multiple sources towards a single proposition that distinguishes the case study from other research methods, whereby separate evidence leads to separate conclusions. (Figure 3.1 illustrates this convergence of multiple sources of evidence) Secondly, the validity of the various individual secondary propositions must then be considered collectively in answering the research question, thereby forming a basis of various evidences to support or refute the main proposition. However, the research project does not conclude with a mere explanation of phenomenon, but seeks to develop conclusions from these explanations which have implications for policy-making as well as further research. To do this, the research must refer back to the wider context of the research topic first described in the introductory section, and draw important links from the research findings to the wider framework of policy-making within its social, economic and political context. This entire research strategy design is summarized in a flow-chart form for ease of appreciation in Figure 3.2.

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Evaluative Survey of Life Satisfaction Consolidated Results

Appendix B

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Structured Interview (Day Reconstruction)


Candidate Age/Gender: 38/M Years of Formal Education: 3 Household Size: 6 Reflection on activities in the previous day Activity (1): Driving the tractor up the mountain Time: 9am to 12 noon Location: From village to mountain Company: Nil (Alone) Feelings Experienced: (rated on a score of ascendance in magnitude from 1 to 6) Pleasant Happy ( 6 ) Capable ( 6 ) Enjoyment ( 0 ) Excited ( 6 ) Calmness ( 4 ) Warm ( 0 ) Unpleasant Frustrated ( 0 ) Worried ( 0 ) Disappointed ( 0 ) Tired ( 0 ) Angry ( 0 ) Impatient ( 0 ) Activity (2): Log-cutting Time: 1230pm to 330pm Location: Logging area on mountain Company: Nil (Alone) Feelings Experienced: Pleasant Happy ( 6 ) Capable ( 6 ) Enjoyment ( 4 ) Excited ( 2 ) Calmness ( 6 ) Warm ( 0 ) Unpleasant Frustrated ( 0 ) Worried ( 4 ) Disappointed ( 0 ) Tired ( 2 ) Angry ( 0 ) Impatient ( 0 ) Activity (3): Transporting fallen logs down the mountain with tractor Time: 330pm to 530pm Location: From mountain to village Company: Nil (Alone) Feelings Experienced: Pleasant Happy ( 6 ) Capable ( 6 ) Enjoyment ( 6 ) Excited ( 2 ) Calmness ( 4 ) Warm ( 0 ) Unpleasant Frustrated ( 0 ) Worried ( 3 ) Disappointed ( 0 ) Tired ( 2 ) Angry ( 0 ) Impatient ( 0 ) Activity (4): Dinner and watching television Time: 7pm to 10pm Location: Home Company: Family members Feelings Experienced: Pleasant Happy ( 6 ) Capable ( 0 ) Enjoyment ( 6 ) Excited ( 0 ) Calmness ( 4 ) Warm ( 6 ) Unpleasant Frustrated ( 0 ) Worried ( 0 ) Disappointed ( 0 ) Tired ( 0 ) Angry ( 0 ) Impatient ( 0 )

Appendix C-1

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Self-sustaining Villages as Sustainable Development in China: Case Study of Xin Jian Tibetan Village, Yunnan

Structured Interview (Day Reconstruction)


Candidate Age/Gender: 37/M Years of Formal Education: Nil Household Size: 7 Reflection on activities in the previous day Activity (1): Going up the mountain for religious prayers Time: 7am to 10 am Location: From village to religious site on mountain, and back to village Company: Nil (Alone) Feelings Experienced: (rated on a score of ascendance in magnitude from 1 to 6) Pleasant Happy ( 6 ) Capable ( 3 ) Enjoyment ( 6 ) Excited ( 3 ) Calmness ( 3 ) Warm ( 6 ) Unpleasant Frustrated ( 0 ) Worried ( 0 ) Disappointed ( 0 ) Tired ( 3 ) Angry ( 0 ) Impatient ( 0 ) Activity (2): Resting (including meals and talking to family/friends) Time: 11am onwards Location: Home Company: Family and friends Feelings Experienced: Pleasant Happy ( 6 ) Capable ( 0 ) Enjoyment ( 3 ) Excited ( 0 ) Calmness ( 3 ) Warm ( 6 ) Unpleasant Frustrated ( 0 ) Worried ( 4 ) Disappointed ( 0 ) Tired ( 0 ) Angry ( 0 ) Impatient ( 0 ) Activity (3): NA Time: Location: Company: Feelings Experienced: Pleasant Happy ( ) Capable ( ) Enjoyment ( ) Excited ( ) Calmness ( ) Warm ( ) Unpleasant Frustrated ( ) Worried ( ) Disappointed ( ) Tired ( ) Angry ( ) Impatient ( ) Activity (4): NA Time: Location: Company: Feelings Experienced: Pleasant Happy ( ) Capable ( ) Enjoyment ( ) Excited ( ) Calmness ( ) Warm ( ) Unpleasant Frustrated ( ) Worried ( ) Disappointed ( ) Tired ( ) Angry ( ) Impatient ( )

Appendix C-2

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Self-sustaining Villages as Sustainable Development in China: Case Study of Xin Jian Tibetan Village, Yunnan

Structured Interview (Day Reconstruction)


Candidate Age/Gender: 67/M Years of Formal Education: Nil Household Size: 6

Appendix C-3

Reflection on activities in the previous day Activity (1): Taking care of the four year old grand-daughter (including strolls around the village) Time: 9am to 6pm Location: Home and village surroundings Company: Grand-daughter Feelings Experienced: (rated on a score of ascendance in magnitude from 1 to 6) Pleasant Happy ( 6 ) Capable ( 6 ) Enjoyment ( 3 ) Excited ( 3 ) Calmness ( 3 ) Warm ( 6 ) Unpleasant Frustrated ( 0 ) Worried ( 0 ) Disappointed ( 0 ) Tired ( 0 ) Angry ( 0 ) Impatient ( 0 ) Activity (2): Feeding the family livestock (dogs, pigs and cows) Time: 12pm to 1215pm and 5pm to 515pm Location: Home and village surroundings Company: Grand-daughter Feelings Experienced: Pleasant Happy ( 6 ) Capable ( 6 ) Enjoyment ( 6 ) Excited ( 3 ) Calmness ( 0 ) Warm ( 3 ) Unpleasant Frustrated ( 0 ) Worried ( 3 ) Disappointed ( 0 ) Tired ( 3 ) Angry ( 0 ) Impatient ( 0 ) Activity (3): Taking meals Time: 9am to 930am; 1230pm to 1pm; 430pm to 5pm; 9pm to 930pm Location: Home Company: Family Feelings Experienced: Pleasant Happy ( 6 ) Capable ( 0 ) Enjoyment ( 6 ) Excited ( 2 ) Calmness ( 4 ) Warm ( 4 ) Unpleasant Frustrated ( 0 ) Worried ( 0 ) Disappointed ( 0 ) Tired ( 0 ) Angry ( 0 ) Impatient ( 0 ) Activity (4): NA Time: Location: Company: Feelings Experienced: Pleasant Happy ( ) Capable ( ) Enjoyment ( ) Excited ( ) Calmness ( ) Warm ( ) Unpleasant Frustrated ( ) Worried ( ) Disappointed ( ) Tired ( ) Angry ( ) Impatient ( )

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Structured Interview (Day Reconstruction)


Candidate Age/Gender: 43/F Years of Formal Education: Three Household Size: 6 Reflection on activities in the previous day Activity (1): Harvesting the barley Time: 9am to 6pm Location: Barley fields in village Company: Family and neighbours Feelings Experienced: (rated on a score of ascendance in magnitude from 1 to 6) Pleasant Happy ( 6 ) Capable ( 6 ) Enjoyment ( 6 ) Excited ( 5 ) Calmness ( 3 ) Warm ( 6 ) Unpleasant Frustrated ( 0 ) Worried ( 0 ) Disappointed ( 0 ) Tired ( 2 ) Angry ( 0 ) Impatient ( 0 ) Activity (2): Cooking Time: 12pm to 1215pm and 745 pm to 8pm Location: Home Company: Daughter Feelings Experienced: Pleasant Happy ( 6 ) Capable ( 6 ) Enjoyment ( 6 ) Excited ( 0 ) Calmness ( 3 ) Warm ( 3 ) Unpleasant Frustrated ( 0 ) Worried ( 3 ) Disappointed ( 0 ) Tired ( 2 ) Angry ( 0 ) Impatient ( 0 )

Appendix C-4

Activity (3): Taking meals (and rest including watching television/ talking to family and friends) Time: 1230pm to 130pm; 830pm to 930pm Location: Home Company: Family and friends Feelings Experienced: Pleasant Happy ( 6 ) Capable ( 0 ) Enjoyment ( 6 ) Excited ( 2 ) Calmness ( 4 ) Warm ( 6 ) Unpleasant Frustrated ( 0 ) Worried ( 0 ) Disappointed ( 0 ) Tired ( 0 ) Angry ( 0 ) Impatient ( 0 ) Activity (4): NA Time: Location: Company: Feelings Experienced: Pleasant Happy ( ) Capable ( ) Enjoyment ( ) Excited ( ) Calmness ( ) Warm ( ) Unpleasant Frustrated ( ) Worried ( ) Disappointed ( ) Tired ( ) Angry ( ) Impatient ( )

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Structured Interview (Day Reconstruction)


Candidate Age/Gender: 65/F Years of Formal Education: Nil Household Size: 7 Reflection on activities in the previous day Activity (1): Meditation and chanting Time: 730 am to 8 pm Location: Home Company: Nil (Alone) Feelings Experienced: (rated on a score of ascendance in magnitude from 1 to 6) Pleasant Happy ( 6 ) Capable ( 6 ) Enjoyment ( 6 ) Excited ( 0 ) Calmness ( 6 ) Warm ( 0 ) Unpleasant Frustrated ( 0 ) Worried ( 0 ) Disappointed ( 0 ) Tired ( 2 ) Angry ( 0 ) Impatient ( 0 ) Activity (2): Eating Time: 9am to 930 am Location: Home Company: Family Feelings Experienced: Pleasant Happy ( 6 ) Capable ( 0 ) Enjoyment ( 6 ) Excited ( 0 ) Calmness ( 4 ) Warm ( 3 ) Unpleasant Frustrated ( 0 ) Worried ( 0 ) Disappointed ( 0 ) Tired ( 0 ) Angry ( 0 ) Impatient ( 0 ) Activity (3): Harvesting the barley Time: 11am to 6pm Location: Barley fields in the village Company: Family and friends Feelings Experienced: Pleasant Happy ( 6 ) Capable ( 5 ) Enjoyment ( 6 ) Excited ( 3 ) Calmness ( 3 ) Warm ( 6 ) Unpleasant Frustrated ( 0 ) Worried ( 0 ) Disappointed ( 0 ) Tired ( 4 ) Angry ( 0 ) Impatient ( 0 ) Activity (4): NA Time: Location: Company: Feelings Experienced: Pleasant Happy ( ) Capable ( ) Enjoyment ( ) Excited ( ) Calmness ( ) Warm ( ) Unpleasant Frustrated ( ) Worried ( ) Disappointed ( ) Tired ( ) Angry ( ) Impatient ( )

Appendix C-5

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Structured Interview (Day Reconstruction)


Candidate Age/Gender: 15/M Years of Formal Education: Four Household Size: 4 Reflection on activities in the previous day Activity (1): Harvesting the barley Time: 9am to 6pm Location: Barley fields in the village Company: Family Feelings Experienced: (rated on a score of ascendance in magnitude from 1 to 6) Pleasant Happy ( 5 ) Capable ( 6 ) Enjoyment ( 6 ) Excited ( 0 ) Calmness ( 0 ) Warm ( 0 )

Appendix C-6

Unpleasant Frustrated ( 0 ) Worried ( 0 ) Disappointed ( 5 ) Tired ( 0 ) Angry ( 0 ) Impatient ( 0 ) Ps. Disappointment was not due to the activity, but due to a breakup with his girlfriend the day before. Activity (2): Rest (Meals and television) Time: 630pm onwards Location: Home Company: Family Feelings Experienced: Pleasant Happy ( 5 ) Capable ( 0 ) Enjoyment ( 6 ) Excited ( 0 ) Calmness ( 2 ) Warm ( 3 ) Unpleasant Frustrated ( 0 ) Worried ( 0 ) Disappointed ( 5 ) Tired ( 0 ) Angry ( 0 ) Impatient ( 0 ) Activity (3): NA Time: Location: Company: Feelings Experienced: Pleasant Happy ( ) Capable ( ) Enjoyment ( ) Excited ( ) Calmness ( ) Warm ( ) Unpleasant Frustrated ( ) Worried ( ) Disappointed ( ) Tired ( ) Angry ( ) Impatient ( )

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Self-sustaining Villages as Sustainable Development in China: Case Study of Xin Jian Tibetan Village, Yunnan

Structured Interview (Day Reconstruction)


Candidate Age/Gender: 22/F Years of Formal Education: Three Household Size: 6 Reflection on activities in the previous day Activity (1): Harvesting the barley Time: 9am to 6pm Location: Barley fields in village Company: Family and neighbours Feelings Experienced: (rated on a score of ascendance in magnitude from 1 to 6) Pleasant Happy ( 6 ) Capable ( 6 ) Enjoyment ( 6 ) Excited ( 6 ) Calmness ( 0 ) Warm ( 0 ) Unpleasant Frustrated ( 0 ) Worried ( 0 ) Disappointed ( 0 ) Tired ( 0 ) Angry ( 0 ) Impatient ( 0 ) Activity (2): Cooking Time: 12pm to 1215pm and 745 pm to 8pm Location: Home Company: Mother Feelings Experienced: Pleasant Happy ( 6 ) Capable ( 6 ) Enjoyment ( 6 ) Excited ( 0 ) Calmness ( 6 ) Warm ( 6) Unpleasant Frustrated ( 0 ) Worried ( 0 ) Disappointed ( 0 ) Tired ( 0 ) Angry ( 0 ) Impatient ( 0 ) Activity (3): NA Time: Location: Company: Feelings Experienced: Pleasant Happy ( ) Capable ( ) Enjoyment ( ) Excited ( ) Calmness ( ) Warm ( ) Unpleasant Frustrated ( ) Worried ( ) Disappointed ( ) Tired ( ) Angry ( ) Impatient ( ) Activity (4): NA Time: Location: Company: Feelings Experienced: Pleasant Happy ( ) Capable ( ) Enjoyment ( ) Excited ( ) Calmness ( ) Warm ( ) Unpleasant Frustrated ( ) Worried ( ) Disappointed ( ) Tired ( ) Angry ( ) Impatient ( )

Appendix C-7

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CP0314 Research Project Candidate Name/Number: Foo Cexiang / 0602721


Self-sustaining Villages as Sustainable Development in China: Case Study of Xin Jian Tibetan Village, Yunnan

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