Evaluating social sustainability of urban housing demolition in Shanghai, China

2017 ◽  
Vol 153 ◽  
pp. 26-40 ◽  
Author(s):  
Tao Yu ◽  
Geoffrey Qiping Shen ◽  
Qian Shi ◽  
Helen Wei Zheng ◽  
Ge Wang ◽  
...  
2021 ◽  
Vol 13 (17) ◽  
pp. 9726
Author(s):  
Angeliki Paidakaki ◽  
Richard Lang

This paper analyzes social sustainability in the context of urban housing through the lens of institutional capital. It examines how civil society housing actors co-construct bottom-linked governance arrangements by interacting endogenously with peers and exogenously with institutional actors, such as public housing agencies and elected officials, in order to steer, as housing alliances, socially sustainable residential developments. The paper thus offers an answer to the following two research questions: (1) What are internal governance features that characterize such civil society housing alliances? (2) What are their strategies of interaction with institutional actors in order to promote social sustainability and thus counter exclusionary patterns in urban housing systems? Empirical evidences are drawn from two civil society housing alliances in Austria, ‘BAWO’ (a national alliance of homelessness NGOs) and the ‘Initiative Collaborative Building & Living’. During three research stays in Vienna between 2014 and 2020, data was collected through semi-structured interviews and focus groups with leaders and members of housing alliances, interviews with key institutional stakeholders and web research. By reflecting on the institutional and relational character of the two housing alliances and digging out their potential and limitations in promoting different elements of social sustainability, our paper concludes that social sustainability in housing systems can be realized when it is set as a societal ambition sufficiently politicized by major parties involved in housing systems (housing alliances, governmental authorities of all ideological backgrounds, large non-profit housing developers) that collectively guarantee housing affordability and socio-spatial equity for all.


Urban Studies ◽  
2020 ◽  
pp. 004209802091215
Author(s):  
Chen Li ◽  
Mark Yaolin Wang ◽  
Jennifer Day

Based on an ongoing housing demolition and relocation project in Dalian, this article describes uncompromising nail households, who have resisted resettlement through intractable conflict and prolonged bargaining. Building upon a state–society approach, this article reveals a new relationship between state, society and governance in the institutional background of neoliberal urbanism in China. Uncompromising nail households within this transforming governance system are able to individually equip and maintain their resistance. The article identifies heterogeneous uncompromising nail households: ‘hard’, who maintain a firm stance throughout the bargaining process; and ‘hardened’, who increase resistance during the process of bargaining. These findings contribute to understanding of the reconfiguration of state–society relations, and demonstrate significant contradictions between the central and local states in the dynamics of change in neoliberal urbanism in China.


2011 ◽  
Vol 368-373 ◽  
pp. 3127-3130
Author(s):  
Mao Sheng Yang ◽  
Lin Zhang

In order to deal with the striking booming process of urbanization in the situation of urban housing demolition expanding and its major contradictions, the interactive fair game theory model is used to solve these contradictions and presented some suggestion. By analyzing the existing contradictions of demolition, the leads interactive justice theory establishes the model to analyze the game among the Government, the demolition, the developers and the demolition, which finally comes to the conclusion of the contradictory solutions and supplies suggestions for the government and developers demolition work. What’s more, it’s helpful to build a harmonious and stable society.


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