Urban spatial restructuring, event-led development and scalar politics
- Hyun Bang Shin, Department of Geography and Environment, London School of Economics and Political Science, Houghton Street, London WC2A 2AE, UK. Email: h.b.shin{at}lse.ac.uk
Abstract
This paper uses Guangzhou’s experience of hosting the 2010 Asian Games to illustrate Guangzhou’s engagement with scalar politics. This includes concurrent processes of intra-regional restructuring to position Guangzhou as a central city in south China and a ‘negotiated scale-jump’ to connect with the world under conditions negotiated in part with the overarching strong central state, testing the limit of Guangzhou’s geopolitical expansion. Guangzhou’s attempts were aided further by using the Asian Games as a vehicle for addressing condensed urban spatial restructuring to enhance its own production/accumulation capacities, and for facilitating urban redevelopment projects to achieve a ‘global’ appearance and exploit the city’s real estate development potential. Guangzhou’s experience of hosting the Games provides important lessons for expanding our understanding of how regional cities may pursue their development goals under the strong central state and how event-led development contributes to this.
Article Notes
-
Funding The author acknowledges the financial support from the LSE Annual Fund/STICERD New Researcher Award (2009-2011) and the Social Science Korea Research Grant (SSK, NRF-2011-330-B00052), National Research Foundation of Korea.
- © Urban Studies Journal Limited 2014












Version of Record