TY - JOUR
T1 - Rethinking Enclosed Neighbourhoods Vital Infrastructure for Design Innovation, Civic Engagement, and Biopower in Urban China
AU - Chiu-Shee, Colleen
N1 - This paper benefitted from research conducted at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology\u2019s Department of Urban Studies and Planning and the National University of Singapore\u2019s Asia Research Institute. I am grateful for the feedback provided by anonymous reviewers, as well as the guidance and support of Dan Abramson, Tim Bunnell, Marc Doussard, Tali Hatuka, Brent Ryan, Lawrence Vale, and Siqi Zheng. I also appreciate the contributions of all the interviewees, even if they may not endorse all the interpretations or conclusions presented here.
PY - 2024
Y1 - 2024
N2 - Capitalist processes of urbanization and privatization have produced a growing number of enclosed neighbourhoods across the world. Critical scholarship often frames these neighbourhoods as products of an overextended neoliberalism and symbols of thea fragmentation, segregation, and hierarchization of both space and society. This paper expands on these theoretical explanations with a focus on China. As neither neoliberal globalization nor tradition can adequately explain various types of China’s enclosed neighbourhoods, a differentiated account suggests that they have evolved in different temporal, sociocultural, and political-economic contexts. Nevertheless, they have commonly played vital roles in (re)shaping everyday environments, driving economic restructuring, transforming governance systems, and facilitating normative transformations in China. China’s experiences show that enclosed neighbourhoods have been, and will remain, the everyday environments that shape citizens’ behaviours, values, and social relations. They have also served, and will continue to serve, as the vital infrastructure that enables both civic engagement and biopolitical control – an irony that remains to be resolved. Lessons from China suggest that future research and practice on enclosed neighbourhoods in different parts of the world can embrace the heterogeneity, adaptability, and practicability of neighbourhood transformations to inspire design and development innovation, enhance social cohesion, and empower citizens.
AB - Capitalist processes of urbanization and privatization have produced a growing number of enclosed neighbourhoods across the world. Critical scholarship often frames these neighbourhoods as products of an overextended neoliberalism and symbols of thea fragmentation, segregation, and hierarchization of both space and society. This paper expands on these theoretical explanations with a focus on China. As neither neoliberal globalization nor tradition can adequately explain various types of China’s enclosed neighbourhoods, a differentiated account suggests that they have evolved in different temporal, sociocultural, and political-economic contexts. Nevertheless, they have commonly played vital roles in (re)shaping everyday environments, driving economic restructuring, transforming governance systems, and facilitating normative transformations in China. China’s experiences show that enclosed neighbourhoods have been, and will remain, the everyday environments that shape citizens’ behaviours, values, and social relations. They have also served, and will continue to serve, as the vital infrastructure that enables both civic engagement and biopolitical control – an irony that remains to be resolved. Lessons from China suggest that future research and practice on enclosed neighbourhoods in different parts of the world can embrace the heterogeneity, adaptability, and practicability of neighbourhood transformations to inspire design and development innovation, enhance social cohesion, and empower citizens.
KW - Housing development and governance
KW - Neoliberalism and privatization
KW - Southern/Eastern perspectives
KW - Urban everyday politics
KW - Urban gating and enclosure
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U2 - 10.2148/benv.50.1.54
DO - 10.2148/benv.50.1.54
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85190834215
SN - 0263-7960
VL - 50
SP - 54
EP - 72
JO - Built Environment
JF - Built Environment
IS - 1
ER -