Vol. 9 · Nos. 1 & 2 · 2005
Segmentation Within the State
The Reconfiguration of Tibetan Tribes in China's Reform Period

Fernanda Pirie

Get Adobe Acrobat. Download full article (111Kb PDF) [subscribers only]

Abstract
Despite the upheavals of collectivisation and reform, the nomadic pastoralists of Amdo, in the north-eastern part of the Tibetan plateau, maintain that they substantially retain historic forms of tribal organisation. The governmental structures of the modern Chinese state have replaced the hereditary rulers, kings and monastic leaders who formerly exercised leadership over the nomads' tribes. However, ideologies of revenge practices of feuding still characterise relations between tribal groups. Moreover, the nomads continue to turn to senior Buddhist lamas mediators, despite the criminal sanctions imposed by the police. It suggested that these elements represent a continuity in tribal forms within the framework of control now exercised by the nation state. An uneasy relationship between tribes and state has long characterised this region and continues to do so in the modern world.

Keywords: Buddhism, China, government, nomads, Tibet, tribes