Changes in the Chinese political economy have necessitated changes in the urban planning system. The traditional system cannot cope with the consequences of decentralisation from the central government to the municipal governments. In Guangzhou decentralisation has promoted the development of more specific planning goals, so the blueprint approach to making plans can hardly guide the rapid development of this provincial capital. As the municipality has to generate funds to implement its plans, and as some land developers are obsessed with profit, they pay scant attention to planning requirements. So development control has become very difficult, if not impossible.link_to_subscribed_fulltex
China’s cities are currently facing immense challenges due to the vast rural-urban migration that ha...
Urban development plans can no longer follow the rules of a traditional system of centralized and pl...
Since the late 1980s two waves of gentrification have occurred in Guangzhou, China and brought about...
The dominance of ideology, state control and economic planning on urban planning and development in ...
The institutional approach needs to be established as the new 'focus' for exploring change...
The urban spatial structure of Chinese cities has been changing since the post-Mao economic reform i...
Summary. China’s changing urban development processes and urban landscapes in the transition towards...
In 2011 China’s urban population exceeded its rural population. Chinese cities have been changing ve...
China is currently moving from a centralized and planned economy to a socialist market economy. In s...
China's changing urban development processes and urban landscapes in the transition towards a more m...
This paper argues that before 1978, the Chinese state, a 'police state' in the Foucauldian concept o...
Most of the existing planning theories (theories in urban development, of planning practice and just...
Private motorization has accompanied unprecedented urbanization in China, as a matter of public poli...
Devolution, globalisation, and marketisation have made Chinese municipalities key players in urban d...
The tradition of planning in China is multisecular. The planning of the Chinese Imperial city was ba...
China’s cities are currently facing immense challenges due to the vast rural-urban migration that ha...
Urban development plans can no longer follow the rules of a traditional system of centralized and pl...
Since the late 1980s two waves of gentrification have occurred in Guangzhou, China and brought about...
The dominance of ideology, state control and economic planning on urban planning and development in ...
The institutional approach needs to be established as the new 'focus' for exploring change...
The urban spatial structure of Chinese cities has been changing since the post-Mao economic reform i...
Summary. China’s changing urban development processes and urban landscapes in the transition towards...
In 2011 China’s urban population exceeded its rural population. Chinese cities have been changing ve...
China is currently moving from a centralized and planned economy to a socialist market economy. In s...
China's changing urban development processes and urban landscapes in the transition towards a more m...
This paper argues that before 1978, the Chinese state, a 'police state' in the Foucauldian concept o...
Most of the existing planning theories (theories in urban development, of planning practice and just...
Private motorization has accompanied unprecedented urbanization in China, as a matter of public poli...
Devolution, globalisation, and marketisation have made Chinese municipalities key players in urban d...
The tradition of planning in China is multisecular. The planning of the Chinese Imperial city was ba...
China’s cities are currently facing immense challenges due to the vast rural-urban migration that ha...
Urban development plans can no longer follow the rules of a traditional system of centralized and pl...
Since the late 1980s two waves of gentrification have occurred in Guangzhou, China and brought about...