Restructuring for growth in urban China: transitional institutions, urban development, and spatial transformation

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Publication Type Manuscript
School or College College of Social & Behavioral Science
Department Geography
Program Institute of Public and International Affairs (IPIA)
Creator Wei, Y. H. Dennis
Title Restructuring for growth in urban China: transitional institutions, urban development, and spatial transformation
Date 2012
Description This research examines government policies and urban transformation in China through a study of Hangzhou City, which is undergoing dramatic growth and restructuring. As the southern center of the Yangtze River Delta, an emerging global city region of China, Hangzhou has been restlessly searching for strategies to promote economic growth and survive the competition with Shanghai. This paper analyzes Hangzhou?s development strategies, including globalization, tourism, industrial development, and urban development, in the context of shifting macro conditions and local responses. We hold that urban policies in China are situated in the broad economic restructuring and the gradual, experiential national reform, and are therefore transitional. We argue that China?s urban policies are state institution-directed, growth-oriented, and land-based, imposing unprecedented challenges to sustainability and livability. Land development and spatial restructuring are central to urban policies in China. Last, while Hangzhou?s development strategies and policies to some extent reflect policy convergence across cities in China, local/spatial contexts, including local settings, territorial rescaling and land conditions, are underlying the functioning of development/entrepreneurial states. Keywords: Globalization, Rescaling, development zones, urban development, Hangzhou, China.
Type Text
Publisher Elsevier
DOI 10.10.16/j.habitatint.2011.12.023
Language eng
Bibliographic Citation Wei, Y. H. D. (2012). Restructuring for growth in urban China: transitional institutions, urban development, and spatial transformation. Habitat International.
Rights Management © Elsevier ; Reprinted from Wei, Y. H. D. (2012). Restructuring for growth in urban China: transitional institutions, urban development, and spatial transformation. Habitat International. http://dx.doi.org/10.10.16/j.habitatint.2011.12.023.
Format Medium application/pdf
Format Extent 2,515,360 bytes
Identifier ir-main,17139
ARK ark:/87278/s6pc3kwb
Setname ir_uspace
ID 705556
Reference URL https://collections.lib.utah.edu/ark:/87278/s6pc3kwb
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