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Urban Informal Settlements: Chengzhongcun and Chinese Urbanism 1st ed. 2022 [Hardback]

  • Formāts: Hardback, 154 pages, height x width: 210x148 mm, weight: 357 g, 19 Illustrations, color; 13 Illustrations, black and white; XIII, 154 p. 32 illus., 19 illus. in color., 1 Hardback
  • Izdošanas datums: 11-Feb-2022
  • Izdevniecība: Palgrave Macmillan
  • ISBN-10: 9811692017
  • ISBN-13: 9789811692017
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  • Formāts: Hardback, 154 pages, height x width: 210x148 mm, weight: 357 g, 19 Illustrations, color; 13 Illustrations, black and white; XIII, 154 p. 32 illus., 19 illus. in color., 1 Hardback
  • Izdošanas datums: 11-Feb-2022
  • Izdevniecība: Palgrave Macmillan
  • ISBN-10: 9811692017
  • ISBN-13: 9789811692017
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This book offers a concise and yet diverse study on the Chengzhongcun. It has a broader scope, both geographical and temporal, than existing works on this topic. The typical Chinese urban informal settlement is related to morphologically similar communities to be found elsewhere in the world. The chapters’ themes were inspired by the methods in historical geography, citizenship studies, and new cultural geography. What is truly unique to this book is that ten years after the basis material of this book was defended, it is enriched with practical experience and first-hand observations of the rapidly changing Chinese city. As urbanization in China slows, this book will interest sociologists, urbanists and scholars of China.

Recenzijas

For historians, geographers, sociologists, anthropologists, architects, political scientists, urban planners and art historians who share the same interest in urban studies, including global and local urban history, urban planning and governance, urban artistic practices, and urban tourism, this book may offer scholastic inspiration, bring inter-disciplinary dialogue, and point the way for future research in this field. (Fanghao Chen, Urban Studies, Vol. 60 (5), 2023)

1 Introduction
1(20)
A World of Slums?
5(2)
Post-Reform Urban China Studies and the Chengzhongcun
7(1)
What is a Chengzhongcun?
7(1)
Chengzhongcun Emerged as a Research Topic
8(3)
The Chengzhongcun Question at Large
11(4)
Structure of the Book
15(2)
References
17(4)
2 The City and Its Other: A Brief Historical Geography
21(8)
The Great Urban Awakening in Europe
22(1)
Origin of the City
22(3)
Henri Pirenne
25(4)
4 Chinese Cities and Its Outcasts
29(12)
Chinese Exceptionalism?
29(2)
Outcasts in Chinese Cities, Then and Now
31(3)
Beyond Etymology: Urban Village in the East and the West
34(1)
English Translations of the chengzhongcun
34(1)
Urban Village Across the Atlantic
35(2)
Conclusion
37(1)
References
38(3)
3 Housing and the Political Economy of Urban China
41(24)
Introduction
42(1)
The Right to Urban Housing
42(1)
Pendulum Between Human Right and Civil Right
42(2)
Legal Framework
44(2)
Critiques on the Right to Urban Housing
46(1)
The Soviet Legacy
47(1)
Background
47(2)
Soviet Planning and Its Problems
49(3)
After the Soviet Union
52(1)
Planning or Political Economy: A Discussion with Him Chung
53(1)
More Than Urban Planning or Design
53(4)
The Political Economy of Urban Inequality
57(2)
The Way Out of the Chengzhongcun
59(1)
Conclusion
60(1)
References
61(4)
4 Chengzhongcun and Its Residents: Empirical Findings
65(30)
Introduction
66(2)
Background and Implementation of the Survey
68(1)
Background Information
68(5)
Survey Sites in Shanghai and Hefei
73(1)
Survey Protocol
74(3)
The Questionnaire
77(1)
Quality of the Survey
78(1)
Representativeness
78(1)
Missing Values
79(1)
Consistency of Responses
80(1)
Survey Analysis
80(1)
Profiles of the Chengzhongcun Residents
80(2)
Channels and Obstacles Toward Urban Integration
82(4)
Perceptions of the Chengzhongcun Residents
86(3)
Conclusion
89(3)
References
92(3)
5 Resistance, Public Art and Citizenship
95(24)
Introduction
96(1)
Citizenship Deconstructed
97(1)
The Right to Education Under the Hukou System
97(2)
Citizenship Mobilized
99(1)
Public Art and Citizenship Pedagogy
100(2)
Staging Art into a Chengzhongcun
102(1)
Urban Development in Hefei
102(1)
Informal Education, Migrant Children and Civil Society
103(1)
Diagnosing Happiness in a Chengzhongcun
104(1)
Urban Resistance and the Engaging Art
104(2)
Engaging a Chengzhongcun
106(2)
Deliberative Democracy: The "Effect of Effects"
108(1)
An Ephemeral Event?
108(2)
Virtual Space of Deliberations
110(4)
Conclusion
114(1)
References
115(4)
6 Slum Tourism: Towards Inclusive Urbanism?
119(18)
Introduction
119(2)
Slum Tourism as Niche Tourism
121(1)
Is Slum Tourism Losing the Ethics Ground?
121(2)
Taking Up the Niche
123(1)
Slum and Slum Tourism in China: Media, Marketing and Management
124(2)
Art-Lead Slum Tourism as an Alternative
126(1)
Times Museum: An Unusual Perspective
127(1)
Dafen: Place Making via Art Business
128(1)
Towards the Inclusive City
129(1)
Discussion
130(2)
References
132(5)
7 Conclusion
137(7)
Urbetfi China in a Nutshell
137(3)
Troubled History, Uncertain Future
140(1)
Normal Urbanism
141(3)
References 144(3)
Appendix 147(4)
Index 151
Yannan Ding is Associate Professor at the Centre for Historical Geography Studies at Fudan University, Shanghai, China.