The largest cities in Pacific Asia are the engines of their countries’ economic growth, seats of national and regional political power, and repositories of the nation’s culture and heritage. The economic changes impacting large cities interact with political forces along with social cultural concerns, and in the process also impact the neighbourhoods of the city. Neighbourhoods for the City in Pacific Asia looks at local collective action and city government responses and its impact on the neighbourhood and the city. A multi-sited comparative approach is taken in studying local action in five important cities (Bangkok, Hong Kong, Seoul, Singapore and Taipei) in Pacific Asia. With site selection in these five cities guided by local experts, neighbourhood issues associated with the fieldsites are explored through interviews with a variety of stakeholders involved in neighourhood building and change. The book enables comparisons across a number of key issues confronting the city: heritage (Bangkok and Taipei), local community involved provisioning of amenities (Seoul and Singapore), placemaking versus place marketing (Bangkok and Hong Kong). Cities are becoming increasingly important as centers for politics, citizen engagement and governance. The collaborative efforts city governments establish with local communities become an important way to address the liveability of cities.
Neighbourhoods for the City in Pacific Asia
Description
Table of Contents
Chapter 1 Neighbourhoods for the City Chapter 2 The Political Economy of Cities in Pacific Asia Chapter 3 The Logic of Comparisons in Multi-sited Research Designs Chapter 4 Sungmisan: The Power of Village Social Enterprises Chapter 5 Mahakan: Neighbourhood Heritage Curation Attempts Chapter 6 Tangbu: Saving the Old Sugar Warehouses Chapter 7 Langham Place: Urban Redevelopment and the Community Question Chapter 8 Tampines Central: Government-Resident Partnerships at Work Chapter 9 Neighbourhood Action, Metropolitan Politics and City Building Index
Author Description
K.C. Ho is a sociologist at the National University of Singapore. Trained at the University of Chicago, his research interests include urban studies, migration, and higher education.