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ID140852
Title ProperReclaiming rights to the socialist city
Other Title Information bureaucratic artefacts and the affective appeal of petitions
LanguageENG
AuthorSchwenkel, Christina
Summary / Abstract (Note)A long history of war and revolution in the industrial city of Vinh has perpetuated cycles of mass destruction followed by urban renewal. This paper examines citizen responses to the shift from post-war socialist urbanization that sought to eradicate inequality to post-reform city planning that advocates private property. It asks: how do urban residents at risk of relocation articulate their rights to the post-socialist city? Tracing the use and circulation of bureaucratic artefacts between citizens, developers and the state, it shows how government documents, far from being mere tools of state regulation, are productive of active, participatory subjectivities and a growing sense of moral–political agency. This agency manifests itself in the collective act of petitioning through which residents contest urban redevelopment and the withdrawal of the state by employing the language of tình cam (sentiment) as an affective tool and logic of bureaucratic rationality.
`In' analytical NoteSouth East Asia Research Vol. 23, No.2; Jun 2015: p.205-225
Journal SourceSouth East Asia Research 2015-06 23, 2
Key WordsSocialism ;  Bureaucracy ;  Vietnam ;  Urbanization ;  Affect ;  Materiality