Emerging Civic Urbanisms in Asia
Title
Emerging Civic Urbanisms in Asia
Subtitle
Hong Kong, Seoul, Singapore, and Taipei beyond Developmental Urbanization
Price
€ 128,99
ISBN
9789048553051
Format
eBook PDF (Adobe DRM)
Number of pages
316
Language
English
Publication date
Dimensions
15.6 x 23.4 cm
Discipline
Asian Studies
Also available as
Hardback - € 129,00
Table of Contents
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Acknowledgements
Abbreviations
1. Emerging Civic Urbanisms in Asia: An Introduction (Im Sik CHO, Blaz KRIZNIK, Jeffrey HOU)
2. Walking Tours and Community Heritage in Singapore: Civic Activism in the Making in Queenstown and Geylang (Shiau Ching WONG)
3. Resistance and Resilience: A Case Study of Rebuilding the Choi Yuen Village in Hong Kong (Mee Kam NG)
4. Urban Planning, Public Interest, and Spatial Justice: A Case Study of Lo-Sheng Sanatorium Preservation Movement in Taipei (Liang-Yi YEN)
5. Placemaking as Social Learning: Taipei’s Open Green Programme as Pedagogical Urban Governance (Jeffrey HOU)
6. Hong Kong’s Urban Renewal Fund: A Step towards Citizen-driven Placemaking? (Melissa CATE CHRIST, Hendrik TIEBEN)
7. Re-emerging Civic Urbanism: The Evolving State–Civil Society Relations in Community Building in Seoul (Blaz KRIZNIK, Su KIM)
8. Shifting Paradigm of Urban Regeneration in Seoul? Case Study of Citizen Participation in Haebangchon Urban Regeneration Project (Taehee LEE, Su-kyoung HAN)
9. Building Communities through Neighbourhood-based Participatory Planning in Singapore (Jan H. M. LIM, Larry YEUNG, Pieter VAN DEN BROECK)
10. Beyond the Sunday Spectacle, Foreign Domestic Workers and Emergent Civic Urbanisms in Hong Kong (Cecilia L. CHU, Marta CATALÁN ERASO)
11. Holding Space, Making Place: Nurturing Emergent Solidarities within New Food Systems in Singapore (Huiying NG, Monika RUT, Vivian LEE, Marcus KOE, Chingwei CHEN)
12. Conclusion: Civic Urbanisms and Urban Governance in Asia and beyond (Im Sik CHO, Blaz KRIZNIK, Jeffrey HOU
Index

Emerging Civic Urbanisms in Asia

Hong Kong, Seoul, Singapore, and Taipei beyond Developmental Urbanization

In parts of Asia, citizens are increasingly involved in shaping their neighbourhoods and cities, representing a significant departure from earlier state-led or market-driven urban development. These emerging civic urbanisms are a result of an evolving relationship between the state and civil society. The contributions in this volume provide critical insights into how the changing state–civil society relationship affects the recent surge of civic urbanism in Hong Kong, Seoul, Singapore, and Taipei, and the authors present eighteen cases of grassroots activism and resistance, collaboration and placemaking, neighbourhood community building, and self-organization and commoning in these cities. Exploring how citizen participation and state–civil society partnerships contribute to more resilient and participatory neighbourhoods and cities, the authors use the concept of civic urbanisms not only as a conceptual framework to understand the ongoing social and urban change but as an aspirational model of urban governance for cities in Asia and beyond.
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Editors

Im Sik Cho

Im Sik Cho is Associate Professor in the Department of Architecture at the National University of Singapore. Her research addresses the challenges and opportunities that Asian cities face focusing on the social dimension of sustainable development. Her publications include Community-Based Urban Development: Evolving Urban Paradigms in Singapore and Seoul (2017).

Blaz KRIZNIK

Blaz Kriznik is Associate Professor of urban sociology at the Graduate School of Urban Studies, Hanyang University in Seoul. He is the co-founder and researcher at the Institute for Spatial Policies in Ljubljana. His research is focused on comparative urban studies, urban social movements and Korean studies.

Jeffrey Hou

Jeffrey Hou is Professor of Landscape Architecture and director of the Urban Commons Lab at the University of Washington, Seattle. His work focuses on public space, democracy, community design, and civic engagement with collaborative publications including City Unsilenced: Urban Resistance and Public Space in the Age of Shrinking Democracy (2017).