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Spatial Mobility of Migrant Workers in Beijing, China / / by Ran Liu
Spatial Mobility of Migrant Workers in Beijing, China / / by Ran Liu
Autore Liu Ran
Edizione [1st ed. 2015.]
Pubbl/distr/stampa Cham : , : Springer International Publishing : , : Imprint : Springer, , 2015
Descrizione fisica 1 online resource (314 p.)
Disciplina 304.8
333.7
344.01
344.03
710
711.4
910
Soggetto topico Regional planning
Urban planning
City planning
Emigration and immigration
Environmental management
Labor law
Landscape/Regional and Urban Planning
Urbanism
Migration
Environmental Management
Labour Law/Social Law
ISBN 3-319-14738-2
Formato Materiale a stampa
Livello bibliografico Monografia
Lingua di pubblicazione eng
Nota di contenuto China’s globalizing primary cities as a contested space: an introduction -- Contentions arising between city imaging pursuits and displacees -- Displacee groups in Beijing: differentiated citizenship & access to space -- Cities with or without slums? A contrast of city models in São Paulo & Beijing -- Conclusion: exigencies produced by the Lefebvrian notion of ‘Right to the City’.
Record Nr. UNINA-9910299442703321
Liu Ran  
Cham : , : Springer International Publishing : , : Imprint : Springer, , 2015
Materiale a stampa
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II
Opac: Controlla la disponibilità qui
Urban Village Redevelopment in Beijing, China : New Housing Opportunities for Migrant Workers
Urban Village Redevelopment in Beijing, China : New Housing Opportunities for Migrant Workers
Autore Liu Ran
Edizione [1st ed.]
Pubbl/distr/stampa Cham : , : Springer International Publishing AG, , 2024
Descrizione fisica 1 online resource (335 pages)
ISBN 9783031616648
9783031616631
Formato Materiale a stampa
Livello bibliografico Monografia
Lingua di pubblicazione eng
Nota di contenuto Intro -- Preface -- Acknowledgments -- Contents -- About the Author -- Abbreviations -- Chapter 1: Introduction to Urban Villages and the Enforced Transience of Migrant Workers -- 1.1 Introduction -- 1.1.1 Urban Village as Informality -- 1.1.2 Urban Village as Heterogeneity -- 1.2 Background: Shifting ``Geography of Opportunity´´ of Migrant Housing in Beijing, China -- 1.2.1 Urban Village as a Networked and Opportunistic World -- 1.2.1.1 The Logic of Opportunism Under State Entrepreneurialism -- 1.2.1.2 Redefining Urban Village in an Open and Mixed Economy -- 1.2.2 Urban Village as a Contested and Constitutive Space -- 1.2.2.1 Monopoly Rents in the Digital and Creative Age -- 1.2.2.2 Urban Village as a Paradox of Autonomy and Commodification -- 1.2.2.3 Domination of Space Through Continuous Appropriation -- 1.3 What This Book Is About -- 1.3.1 Overarching Research Question -- 1.3.2 Overarching Research Aim -- 1.3.3 Detailed Questions and Specific Research Objectives -- 1.3.4 Rationale for the Study -- 1.4 Research Methods and Contexts -- 1.4.1 Selection of Beijing as a Case Study City -- 1.4.2 Research Methods -- 1.4.2.1 Theoretical Foundations -- 1.4.2.2 Methodology and Area of Study -- 1.5 Organization of the Book: The Chapters -- References -- Part I: Emerging Urban Village -- Chapter 2: Emerging Urban Village and Legitimacy Debates: A Supply-Side Institutional Analysis -- 2.1 Introduction -- 2.2 Rural Land Development Rights as Peasants´ Right to the City -- 2.2.1 Peasants´ Right to the City -- 2.2.1.1 Lefebvrian Concept of the Right to the City -- 2.2.1.2 Peasants´ Right to the City in the Context of China -- 2.2.2 State Monopoly on Rural Land Conversion and Transaction -- 2.2.2.1 Who Is the Rural Landowner? -- 2.2.2.2 The Ambiguities of Rural Property Rights -- 2.2.2.3 New Challenges of ``Land Finance´´ and ``Land Financialization´´.
2.3 Peasants´ Counterplots: Why Do the Authorities Tolerate Such Informal Markets? -- 2.3.1 Peasants´ Informal Housing Markets -- 2.3.1.1 Under-Compensation Based on the Original Farm Use -- 2.3.1.2 A New Mechanism of Landed ``Surplus Value´´ Sharing -- 2.3.2 State Tolerance -- 2.3.2.1 Different Opinions and Policies on Urban Village -- 2.3.2.2 Policy Change: From Temporary Tolerance to Acceptance -- 2.3.3 An Institutional Analysis of State Acquiescence -- 2.3.3.1 Critical Thinking on Informality: From a Formal vs. Informal Dichotomy to the Continuum of (In)Formalization -- 2.3.3.2 Why Have Studies of Informality Focused on the Dislocation of Local Peasants Rather Than Migrant Tenants? -- 2.4 Survey of Urban Villages in Haidian District: From State Tolerance to Growth Coalition -- 2.4.1 Xiaojiahe Urban Village: Informal Rental Housing Market from the Supply Side -- 2.4.1.1 An Introduction to Xiaojiahe -- 2.4.1.2 Mechanism of Rental Business in Xiaojiahe -- 2.4.2 An Ongoing Debate on Land Monopoly and Rental Income Distribution -- 2.4.2.1 ``Demolition and Relocation´´ or ``Vacating´´?-Policy Debate from 2008 to 2023 to Pacify Land Tensions -- 2.4.2.2 A Review of ``Land Value as Social Creation´´ -- References -- Chapter 3: Resilience of Housing Supply in Urban Villages for Migrant Groups: A Demand Side Investigation -- 3.1 Introduction -- 3.2 Tenure Hybridity/Continuum: From the Perspective of Lefebvrian ``Planetary Urbanization´´ -- 3.2.1 An Overview of Lefebvrian ``Planetary Urbanization´´ -- 3.2.2 A Need for ``Tenure Continuum´´ Thinking in Our Age of Planetary Urbanization -- 3.2.3 Different Forms of Informal/Semi-Formal Tenure in a Global Context -- 3.3 Stratified Citizenship in Tenure Hybridity/Continuum - The Example of Migrant Children´s Education -- 3.3.1 ``Points System´´ and the Role of Tenure in it.
3.3.2 Educational Policy for Migrant Children in Beijing -- 3.4 A Tenure Hybridity/Continuum Structure for Migrant Groups in Transitional Beijing -- 3.4.1 Tenure Hybridity/Continuum: Permanent or Transient? -- 3.4.2 A Proposed Structure for Tenure Hybridity/Continuum -- 3.4.3 Why Is Tenure Hybridity/Continuum a Resilient Arrangement in Urban China? -- 3.5 A Broader Scope of ``Trans-Rural Network´´ for Multi-Site Tenure Strategy Between Village Home and Beijing -- 3.5.1 A Planetary Thinking on the Trans-Rural Network -- 3.5.2 The Importance of Rural Land Ownership in Rural-Urban Migration -- References -- Part II: Erasing the Urban Village -- Chapter 4: Urban Village Redevelopment in Beijing -- 4.1 Introduction: The State´s Rationale for Urban Village Redevelopment -- 4.1.1 Dissolution of Patron-Client Relationships in the Urban Village -- 4.1.2 Beijing Urban Village Redevelopment: Development and Impact -- 4.2 Survey of Redeveloped Villages in Haidian, Beijing -- 4.2.1 Background of Haidian Urban Village Redevelopment -- 4.2.2 Haidian Model () as the Most Symbolic and Representative of Beijing´s Urban Village Redevelopment -- 4.2.2.1 The Loss of Migrant Population in Haidian: 2010-2020 -- 4.2.2.2 Property Rights Granted in a Contentious Way -- 4.2.2.3 Linking Village Redevelopment with the Low-Rent Housing Plan: Limited Transferability of Rural Land Disposal Rights -- 4.2.3 Survey Methods -- 4.3 Socio-Spatial Outcomes: Territorial Reconfiguration and Gentrification -- 4.3.1 Key Actors in the Formalization Process and Their Different Fates -- 4.3.2 Changes in the Rental Housing Market in the Redeveloped Urban Villages in Haidian District: 2009 to the Present -- 4.3.3 Haidian Model of Housing the Knowledge Economy -- 4.3.3.1 Public Housing Schemes in Haidian Redeveloped Villages -- 4.3.3.2 ``Maker Town´´ in the Vacated Village in Haidian.
4.3.3.3 The Village and Township Level High-Tech Parks in Haidian -- References -- Chapter 5: Urban Village Sprawl After Demolition in Beijing -- 5.1 Introduction -- 5.1.1 The Role of the Urban Village Beyond ``Flexible´´ Social Housing -- 5.1.2 Urban Villages to House the Knowledge Economy and Its Precarious Workers -- 5.2 A Review of Government Policies to Control Urban Village Sprawl in Beijing -- 5.2.1 Management and Demolition of Urban Villages -- 5.2.2 Changes in the Distribution of Migrant Groups in Beijing: 2000, 2010 and 2020 Census Data -- 5.3 Four Representative ``Dispersal Routes´´ for Migrant Tenants Following the ``Dispersal Policy´´ in Beijing -- 5.3.1 Dongxiaokou (Haidian-Changping-Chaoyang Interface): From the Largest Garbage Dumps to Urban Forest Parks -- 5.3.2 Dispersion of Migrant Garment Manufacturing and Wholesale Workers: From Fengtai to Daxing and Then to Hebei -- 5.3.3 Disappearance of Cuigezhuang Art Clans (near the 798 Art District) and Re-gathering of Dispersed Artists in Songzhuang -- 5.3.4 Shigezhuang Village in Huilongguan (Haidian-Changping Interface) as an Emerging Giant ``Ant Tribe´´ Area -- 5.4 A Case Study of New Housing Opportunities for IT Workers during Urban Village Sprawl from Haidian to Changping -- 5.4.1 Why Did IT Workers Choose to Live in Urban Villages? -- 5.4.2 A Comparative Study to Track the Mobility of IT Workers -- 5.4.3 How Have Migrant Tenants Responded to Demolition? -- References -- Part III: Preserving the Urban Village -- Chapter 6: Grassroots in Incremental Village Redevelopment: New Opportunities for Migrants in the Commons -- 6.1 Introduction: Logics of Urban Village Redevelopment-Commodification vs. Reciprocity in the Commons -- 6.1.1 Urban Village as Commons -- 6.1.2 Logic of Opportunism in the Ambiguities of Collectively Owned Rural Land.
6.1.2.1 Analyzing Urban Villages in Unitary CPR Settings -- 6.1.2.2 Property Rights Scheme in Urban Village CPRs -- 6.1.2.3 The Political Economy of Monopolistic Control in the CPRs -- 6.2 Coevolving and Unitary Formality-Informality for the Production of Urban Villages in Metropolises -- 6.2.1 Urban Village as Peri-Urban Mosaic in Constantly Unresolved Tensions -- 6.2.2 Urban Village as a Formal-Informal Mix in Micro-adaptation Processes -- 6.2.3 Case Study of a Garbage Dumping Village (Banjieta Village ) in Dongxiaokou Town, Changping District -- 6.2.3.1 Informality Within Formality: Case Study of a State-Initiated Megaproject Negotiation in Taipingzhuang (太) -- 6.2.3.2 Formality Within Informality: Case Study of an Exclusive Villa in Banjieta Urban Village () as Dumping Site -- 6.3 Issues of Rent Seeking, Appropriation and Provision in the Incremental Modes of Artists´ and IT Workers´ Villages -- 6.3.1 Urban Village as ``Semicommons´´ for Migrant Creative Workers -- 6.3.2 Urban Village as a Porous Space or Interstice for Grassroots Rent Appropriation -- 6.3.3 Surveys on Heiqiao Art Village () and Shigezhuang IT Ant Tribe () in the Creative Economy -- 6.3.3.1 A Vanishing Heiqiao Art Village: An Oasis and a Mirage -- 6.3.3.2 Shigezhuang IT Worker Village: Shifting Between State and Market -- References -- Chapter 7: Conclusion: Prospects for a Communal but Contested World-New Opportunities for the Urban Village -- 7.1 Summary of Findings -- 7.2 Originality of This Book -- 7.3 New Opportunities and Future Prospects: Dialogue with Comparative Urbanism -- References -- Index.
Record Nr. UNINA-9910865238803321
Liu Ran  
Cham : , : Springer International Publishing AG, , 2024
Materiale a stampa
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II
Opac: Controlla la disponibilità qui