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China's Urban Construction Land Development - The State, Market, and Peasantry in Action (Hardcover, 1st ed. 2020)
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China's Urban Construction Land Development - The State, Market, and Peasantry in Action (Hardcover, 1st ed. 2020)
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This book examines the nature and internal dynamics of China's
urban construction land (UCL) development, drawing insights from
the recently developed theory of regional political ecology. Based
on the author's original research, it identifies two different
types of UCL development in China, namely top-down, formal
development in the legal and regulated domain, and spontaneous and
informal, bottom-up development in the semi-legal, poorly regulated
gray domain. Presenting a systematic analysis and comparison, it
reveals a scale and speed of informal land development no less
significant than that of formal land development, although informal
land development tends to be scattered, pervasive, difficult to
track, and largely overlooked in research and policy formation.
Contrary to the popular perception of the peasantry as passive
victims of land development, this book uncovers an intriguing
dynamic in which the peasantry has played an increasingly
(pro)active role in developing their rural land for urban uses in
informal markets. Further, based on an investigation of UCL
development in Beijing and Shenzhen, it shows an interesting
trajectory in which the uneven growth and utilization of UCL are
contingent upon the various developmental milieus in different
places. China's land institutions, based on an urban-rural dual
land system, are not conducive to the ultimate goal of saving and
efficiently utilizing land. Accordingly, an urban-rural integrated
land market and management system is highly advisable. The
theoretical and empirical enquiry presented challenges the
perceived notion of China's UCL development as the outcome of
market demand and state supply. Further, it argues for an inclusive
treatment of the informality that has characterized urbanization in
many developing countries, and for a reassessment of the role
played by the peasantry in land-based urbanization.
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