DocumentCode
2725578
Title
China´s future requires managing its urbanization “right”
Author
Gong, Yue Ray
Author_Institution
Dept. of Urban Design & Planning, Univ. of Washington, Seattle, WA, USA
fYear
2011
fDate
17-19 June 2011
Firstpage
1
Lastpage
8
Abstract
This paper explains why China´s future requires a “right” urbanization and how it can be achieved. The paper first indicates that the process of a “right” urbanization should be gradual in order to reduce destruction to the rural sector and the end result should appropriately diminish Chinese rural and urban divide. In addition, the paper advises that Chinese urbanization should avoid two pitfalls: the belief that a complete urbanization destines China to a better future and the belief that Chinese urbanization can be separated from rural development. The paper also proposes two approaches in order to achieve a “right” urbanization: the allocation of more resources to rural migrant workers, and an appropriate balance of urbanization, industrialization and rural development through empowerment of rural migrant workers. Responding to proposals of current radical urbanization in several inland cities and regions, and a relatively stagnant pace in the coastal area, e.g. Guangdong province, the last part of the paper examines the Pearl River Delta (PRD) model which mainly influenced the development in the Chinese reform, and suggests that a progressive PRD model according to the two approaches above can be a “right” model in the future Chinese urbanization.
Keywords
socio-economic effects; town and country planning; China; Pearl River Delta model; resource allocation; right urbanization; rural development; rural migrant workers; rural sector destruction reduction; Adaptation models; Cities and towns; Economics; Industries; Local government; Production; Rural Migrant Workers; Urbanization; the Pearl River Delta Model;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
China Planning Conference (IACP), 2011 5th International Association for
Conference_Location
Beijing
Print_ISBN
978-1-4577-1395-8
Electronic_ISBN
978-1-4577-1396-5
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/IACP.2011.5982036
Filename
5982036
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