Variegated Valuation: Governance and Circuits of Value in Shenzhen
Détails
ID Serval
serval:BIB_9256954C2A45
Type
Article: article d'un périodique ou d'un magazine.
Collection
Publications
Institution
Titre
Variegated Valuation: Governance and Circuits of Value in Shenzhen
Périodique
Focaalblog
Statut éditorial
Publié
Date de publication
20/07/2020
Langue
anglais
Résumé
Over the past two decades, the central authorities in the People’s Republic of China have shown an increasing concern about the inequalities between urban dwellers and predominantly rural hukou (residence registration) holders that have migrated to the cities. In 2016 a new policy on urban planning coined the concept of ‘livable cities’ and stated that migrants from the countryside have the same rights as urban residents to basic public goods and services such as healthcare and education (Xinhua News Agency 2016). Migrant workers often account for 30 per cent of the population in China’s major cities, but they comprise 80 per cent or more of the total population in urban villages or ‘villages-in-the-city’, rural villages converted into urban communities (shequ) (Chung 2010). The former village of Pine Mansion (the pseudonym of my main field site) is in a transitory state, awaiting the completion of the three phases of urban redevelopment (2010–2018, 2018–2026 and 2026-2034). During this transition, natives and migrants are subject to variegated governance, ‘diverse modes of government – disciplinary, regulatory, pastoral – that administer populations in terms of their relevance to global capital’ (Ong 2006: 78). While Ong shows how variegated governance rests on zoning technologies and results in ‘graduated sovereignty’, here this variegation occurs within the same microspatial unit.
This allows observing how variegated governance involves variegated valuation. Valuation is understood both as economic valorization and political acknowledgement of social worth (Collins 2017). I sketch the outlines of two circuits of value creation and redistribution, where value generated in one is extracted in favor of the other so as to form a wider circuit of value extraction.
This allows observing how variegated governance involves variegated valuation. Valuation is understood both as economic valorization and political acknowledgement of social worth (Collins 2017). I sketch the outlines of two circuits of value creation and redistribution, where value generated in one is extracted in favor of the other so as to form a wider circuit of value extraction.
Mots-clé
China, urbanisation, governance, value, valuation, migrants, urban/rural, public goods and services, Chine, gouvernance, valeur, rural/urbain, biens et services publics
Open Access
Oui
Création de la notice
04/01/2021 13:48
Dernière modification de la notice
09/02/2021 15:11