Document Type
Journal article
Source Publication
China Perspectives
Publication Date
6-1-2014
Volume
2014
Issue
2
First Page
53
Last Page
60
Keywords
Activism, Collectivities, Proletarianisation, Urban space, Urbanisation
Abstract
While the "state-led urbanisation" argument highlights the dominance of state power in China's urban process, the notion of "local state/village corporatism" pays attention to the significant stake of local governments and their rural collectivities in economic development and urban growth, especially in the region of Guangdong's Pearl River Delta. Yet, these two arguments overlook the multiple forms of collectivities, including the communal land system, local clanship, and territories of folk religion, and their participation in the urban process. This article adopts a more structural approach by seeing the "urban process" as the socio-spatial reorganisation of and struggle over "the collective" in the capitalist socio-spatial relations of production. With the ethnographic study of Village Z in Dongguan, I argue that proletarianisation is not simply an integral part of the urban process but also the background against which communal imagination and the cellular form of activism take their shapes. Local collectivities do not necessarily share the interests and values of the developmental states but counteract the local states at all levels, thereby perpetuating contestation over urban spaces.
Print ISSN
20703449
E-ISSN
19964617
Publisher Statement
Copyright © China Perspectives. All rights reserved.
Full-text Version
Publisher’s Version
Language
English
Recommended Citation
Ip, I.-c. (2014). Urbanisation, the state, and community activism in the Pearl River Delta: The case of a land dispute in Dongguan. China Perspectives, 2014(2), 61-67. Retrieved from http://chinaperspectives.revues.org/6467