TY - JOUR
T1 - From the arrival cities to affordable cities in China
T2 - seeing through the practices of rural migrants' participation in Guangzhou's urban village regeneration
AU - Chen, Weixuan
AU - Ye, Changdong
AU - Liu, Yingsheng
N1 - Funding Information:
This work was supported by the China Scholarship Council , grant number 202208330343 , the Natural Science Foundation of Guangdong Provincial Research on community integration, mechanism and strategies of the accompanying elderly , grant number 2023A1515012861 , and the National Natural Science Foundation of China, the impact and evolution processes of urban renewal on social equity of public space from supply-demand perspective , grant number 41871156 .
Publisher Copyright:
© 2023 Elsevier Ltd
PY - 2023/8
Y1 - 2023/8
N2 - Urban village regeneration has been considered an effective way to achieve the vision of transforming the arrival cities in China to affordable cities. However, the existing research into urban village regeneration does not pay enough attention to the group of rural migrants, and the dynamic process of their participation is indistinct. With a theoretical underpinning of the conception of Arrival City and Affordable City and the ladder theory of participation, this paper attempts to understand the practices of rural migrants' participation in urban village regeneration and, more importantly, to unpack the underlying mysteries of the transition process from arrival cities to affordable cities in China. The paper finds that rural migrants are involved in urban village regeneration indirectly, as opposed to directly or not participating at all. Before a regeneration project take places, they are expelled and ostracised by the alliance of “government-developer-villager” because of their informal identities. After the project, middle-class migrants lived in the regenerated urban villages but suffered from social exclusion. Most of the migrants gather in the newer urban villages or form new arrival cities in the urban periphery, resulting in potential social conflicts and a vicious cycle of “regeneration – migration – regeneration – migration”. The vision is realised only in the environment and discourses from the alliance, but not in terms of rural migrants. China's urban transition from arrival cities to affordable cities is incomplete and one-sided. This transition, guided as it is by the existing mechanism of urban village regeneration, undermines social equity and causes social conflicts, which is not sustainable. These findings and proposed corresponding suggestions can serve as valuable references for the practices of public participation in urban regeneration that are underway in developing countries or where there is eagerness to transition effectively from arrival cities to affordable cities.
AB - Urban village regeneration has been considered an effective way to achieve the vision of transforming the arrival cities in China to affordable cities. However, the existing research into urban village regeneration does not pay enough attention to the group of rural migrants, and the dynamic process of their participation is indistinct. With a theoretical underpinning of the conception of Arrival City and Affordable City and the ladder theory of participation, this paper attempts to understand the practices of rural migrants' participation in urban village regeneration and, more importantly, to unpack the underlying mysteries of the transition process from arrival cities to affordable cities in China. The paper finds that rural migrants are involved in urban village regeneration indirectly, as opposed to directly or not participating at all. Before a regeneration project take places, they are expelled and ostracised by the alliance of “government-developer-villager” because of their informal identities. After the project, middle-class migrants lived in the regenerated urban villages but suffered from social exclusion. Most of the migrants gather in the newer urban villages or form new arrival cities in the urban periphery, resulting in potential social conflicts and a vicious cycle of “regeneration – migration – regeneration – migration”. The vision is realised only in the environment and discourses from the alliance, but not in terms of rural migrants. China's urban transition from arrival cities to affordable cities is incomplete and one-sided. This transition, guided as it is by the existing mechanism of urban village regeneration, undermines social equity and causes social conflicts, which is not sustainable. These findings and proposed corresponding suggestions can serve as valuable references for the practices of public participation in urban regeneration that are underway in developing countries or where there is eagerness to transition effectively from arrival cities to affordable cities.
KW - Affordable cities
KW - Arrival cities
KW - China
KW - Public participation
KW - Rural migrants
KW - Urban village regeneration
UR - https://doi.org/10.1016/j.habitatint.2023.102872
U2 - 10.1016/j.habitatint.2023.102872
DO - 10.1016/j.habitatint.2023.102872
M3 - Article
SN - 0197-3975
VL - 138
JO - Habitat International
JF - Habitat International
M1 - 102872
ER -