Annotations - traditionalism
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“Unfortunately, the ap proaches are very strong on pa per and very weak in fact,” said Giovanni Schneider, chief exec utive of Schneider Group, which trades cashmere out of Mongoha. Mr. Schneider, who is work ing with Kering, said the chal lenge is getting herders scattered across Mongolia’s vast steppe to follow guidehnes. “It’s very difficult to engage the herder and explain that growing sustainable cashmere is a good thing to do,” he said. While herders have been re ceptive, “it’s very hard to go against the tradition of no madic life,” he added
textbook argument about resistance to change
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For Bayasgalan, the stakes are clear. When she studied in the United States, she took a trip across Montana and Wyoming, places with landscapes remarkably similar to Mongolia's but for one important thing: fences. Bayasgalan blanches at the idea of locking up Mongolia's land; the notion of open grasslands where herders and animals roam freely is, to her and many others, the country's essence. Whether that ideal can be saved in a world of cheap cashmere sweaters and climate change is the question Mongolia is now facing
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Yet sweeping changes to protect the grasslands have been politically unpalatable in a democracy whose voters feel a deep connection to the open, unregulated grassland. With urbanization on the rise, herders also face new