Item Details
Skip Navigation Links
   ActiveUsers:674Hits:19881613Skip Navigation Links
Show My Basket
Contact Us
IDSA Web Site
Ask Us
Today's News
HelpExpand Help
Advanced search

In Basket
  Journal Article   Journal Article
 

ID152526
Title ProperContentious space and scale politics
Other Title Informationplanning for intercity railway in China's mega-city regions
LanguageENG
AuthorXu, Jiang
Summary / Abstract (Note)Over the past three decades, we have seen a flourishing of scholarship which explores the emerging political spaces and variegated scales of governance in China. This research draws on political economic tradition to argue that the way in which cities and regions are governed is indeed infused with socio-political struggles which are proliferating at a range of spatial scales. Such theoretical interpretation is illuminating, but it has been subject to increasing criticism from the poststructuralist approach that views scale as an epistemological construct. This paper uses the Pearl River Delta Intercity Railway System (PRD-ICRS) as a case study to challenge the onesidedness of both the political economy tradition and the poststructuralist approach in reading scale. It employs the “scale politics” thesis to argue that scale is more than a material existence (or institutionalised structure) that represents a particular arrangement of political power, being subject to perpetual transformation through regulatory projects and strategies. It is also a “representation trope” deployed in political discourses to acquire persuasive power to frame and legitimise these projects and strategies. Scale is thus both material and discursive. Understanding the two moments of scale enables a fuller dissection of political transformation.
`In' analytical NoteAsia Pacific Viewpoint Vol. 58, No.1; Apr 2017: p.57-73
Journal SourceAsia Pacific Viewpoint 2017-04 58, 1
Key WordsPlanning ;  China ;  Pearl River Delta ;  Railway ;  Intercity ;  Scale Politics