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@article{73c3c1d59ffa48e1bb49487b23cd89d1,
title = "Path Dependency vs Neoliberal Urbanism: Comparative Governance of urban Redevelopment of Collective Farmland in Chinese and Russian Cities",
abstract = "Abstract: The objective of this paper is to contribute with empirical evidence and conceptualization of the impact of both socialist “path dependency” effects and governance patterns during the neoliberal reforms over the last 30 years on urban farmland redevelopment in Russian and Chinese largest cities. Using the examples of St. Petersburg and Guangzhou, the paper examines governance principles which have led from the same/comparable specific starting point to different results of urban redevelopment of former socialist collective farmland. While neoliberal modernization effects during urban redevelopment of former socialist farmland brought the internationally common urban built environment both in Chinese and Russian metropolises, path-dependent governance models introduced substantially different business, social and administrative structures. In the St. Petersburg farmland redevelopment case, globalizing neoliberal impacts overruled specific “path-dependency” ones in political, legal, economic urban institutions, and both impacts were equally important for the transformation of urban social practices and structures. In Guangzhou, case path dependency specificity turned much more pronounced in political and social practices and structures, while neoliberal and “path-dependency” impacts were probably of equal importance for legal and economic structural transformations. While Russian radical transition model made business the main driver of such redevelopment, diminishing the role of local self-governance and enhancing the role of public activism, under Chinese gradual transition model local administrative and social self-organization played the key role controlling and even overruling interests of business actors.",
keywords = "collective farmland, comparative governance, neoliberal urbanism, path dependency, redevelopment",
author = "Аксенов, {Константин Эдуардович} and Bin Li and Архипова, {Анна Вячеславовна}",
year = "2024",
month = sep,
day = "1",
doi = "10.1134/s2079970524600306",
language = "English",
volume = "14",
pages = "444–457",
journal = "Regional Research of Russia",
issn = "2079-9705",
publisher = "Springer Nature",
number = "3",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Path Dependency vs Neoliberal Urbanism: Comparative Governance of urban Redevelopment of Collective Farmland in Chinese and Russian Cities

AU - Аксенов, Константин Эдуардович

AU - Li, Bin

AU - Архипова, Анна Вячеславовна

PY - 2024/9/1

Y1 - 2024/9/1

N2 - Abstract: The objective of this paper is to contribute with empirical evidence and conceptualization of the impact of both socialist “path dependency” effects and governance patterns during the neoliberal reforms over the last 30 years on urban farmland redevelopment in Russian and Chinese largest cities. Using the examples of St. Petersburg and Guangzhou, the paper examines governance principles which have led from the same/comparable specific starting point to different results of urban redevelopment of former socialist collective farmland. While neoliberal modernization effects during urban redevelopment of former socialist farmland brought the internationally common urban built environment both in Chinese and Russian metropolises, path-dependent governance models introduced substantially different business, social and administrative structures. In the St. Petersburg farmland redevelopment case, globalizing neoliberal impacts overruled specific “path-dependency” ones in political, legal, economic urban institutions, and both impacts were equally important for the transformation of urban social practices and structures. In Guangzhou, case path dependency specificity turned much more pronounced in political and social practices and structures, while neoliberal and “path-dependency” impacts were probably of equal importance for legal and economic structural transformations. While Russian radical transition model made business the main driver of such redevelopment, diminishing the role of local self-governance and enhancing the role of public activism, under Chinese gradual transition model local administrative and social self-organization played the key role controlling and even overruling interests of business actors.

AB - Abstract: The objective of this paper is to contribute with empirical evidence and conceptualization of the impact of both socialist “path dependency” effects and governance patterns during the neoliberal reforms over the last 30 years on urban farmland redevelopment in Russian and Chinese largest cities. Using the examples of St. Petersburg and Guangzhou, the paper examines governance principles which have led from the same/comparable specific starting point to different results of urban redevelopment of former socialist collective farmland. While neoliberal modernization effects during urban redevelopment of former socialist farmland brought the internationally common urban built environment both in Chinese and Russian metropolises, path-dependent governance models introduced substantially different business, social and administrative structures. In the St. Petersburg farmland redevelopment case, globalizing neoliberal impacts overruled specific “path-dependency” ones in political, legal, economic urban institutions, and both impacts were equally important for the transformation of urban social practices and structures. In Guangzhou, case path dependency specificity turned much more pronounced in political and social practices and structures, while neoliberal and “path-dependency” impacts were probably of equal importance for legal and economic structural transformations. While Russian radical transition model made business the main driver of such redevelopment, diminishing the role of local self-governance and enhancing the role of public activism, under Chinese gradual transition model local administrative and social self-organization played the key role controlling and even overruling interests of business actors.

KW - collective farmland

KW - comparative governance

KW - neoliberal urbanism

KW - path dependency

KW - redevelopment

UR - https://www.mendeley.com/catalogue/172f6dcc-8bfa-3a00-9190-b203fec1e9f3/

U2 - 10.1134/s2079970524600306

DO - 10.1134/s2079970524600306

M3 - Article

VL - 14

SP - 444

EP - 457

JO - Regional Research of Russia

JF - Regional Research of Russia

SN - 2079-9705

IS - 3

ER -

ID: 126068119