International Conference on Globalization, the State, and Urban Transformation in China

Lam Woo International Conference Centre

Hong Kong Baptist University

15-17 December, 2003

Organizers:

Centre for China Urban and Regional Studies, Hong Kong Baptist University

Department of Geography, Hong Kong Baptist University

Working Group on Urban Transformation in China and Reorganization of the State in an Era of Globalization, Urban China Research Network, State University of New York at Albany

Co-Organizer:

International Center for China Development Studies, The University of Hong Kong

Sponsors:

Hong Kong Baptist University Research Committee

Hong Kong Society of Asia and Pacific Twenty-One

China Studies Course Advisory Committee, Hong Kong Baptist University

Working Group on Spatial Restructuring, Planning and Politics in Urban China, UCRN

Organizing Committee

Carolyn Cartier, University of Southern California.

Si-mingLi, Hong Kong Baptist University

Christopher J Smith, State University of New York at Albany

Wing-shing Tang, Hong Kong Baptist University

Simon Xiaobin Zhao, The University of Hong Kong

Program Committee

Si-mingLi

Wing-shing Tang

Conference Secretariats

Yuk Ting Fion Law

Hoi-por Ng

Centre for China Urban and Regional Studies

Hong Kong Baptist University

Preliminary Programme

Day 1 15 December, 2003 (Monday)

08:30Registration

09:00Opening Ceremony

Address by President of HKBU

Address by Professor Christopher J Smith, Professor of Department of Geography and Planning, State University of New York at Albany and Chair of the UCRN Working Group

Address by Professor Kenneth K. K. Wong, Head of Geography Department, Hong Kong Baptist University

Address by Professor Si-ming Li, Director of Centre for China Urban and Regional Studies, Hong Kong Baptist University and Co-Chair of the UCRN Working Group

Address by Professor Carolyn Cartier, Associate Professor of Geography, University of Southern California, and Co-Chair of the UCRN Working Group

09:30Keynote Address I

Professor Neil Smith, City University of New York, “New Globalism, New Urbanism”

10:30Tea Break

10:45Keynote Address II

Professor Michael Dutton, Department of Political, Science, Asialink, University of Melbourne, “Policing the Political: Re-Arranging the Social”

12:00Lunch

13:30Session 1Plenary 1.Theorizing Urban Transformation: Space, Governance and Scale Relations

Carolyn Cartier, Department of Geography, University of Southern California, “Scaling the Chinese State”

Wing-Shing Tang, Department of Geography, Hong Kong Baptist University, “State/space in China: Towards Urban Governmentality”

14:30Session 2Plenary 2.Applications of Scale Relations: Economic Development

Laurence, J. C. Ma, Department of Geography, University of Akron, “China’s Changing Urban Administrative System: Spatial Restructuring and Local Economic Development”

Kam Wing Chan, Department of Geography, University of Washington and Kai Yuen Tsui, The Chinese University of Hong Kong, “Understanding China's Spatial Administrative System and Changes: An Exploration”

Fang Cai and Yang Du, Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, Institute of Population and Labor Economics, “The Urban Expansion in Transitional China: Hierarchy of City, Financing Capacity, and Migration Policy”

16:00Tea Break

16:15Session 3Plenary 3.Applications of Scale Relations: Socio-political Domains

Alana, Boland, Department of Geography, University of Toronto, “Environmental Governance in Urban China: Natural Competition and the Rescaling of the Local”

Darrin Magee, Department of Geography, University of Washington, “The Scale of Power: An Inquiry into Trans-border Resource Governance and the Multi-scalar Chinese State”

Alan Smart, Department of Anthropology, University of Calgary, “Urban Regimes and Rescaling Projects in the Emerging Hong Kong/Pearl River Delta Urban Region”

18:30 Dinner: Sponsored by Hong Kong Society of Asia and Pacific Twenty-One

Address by Professor Nyaw Mee-kau, Vice President of Lingnan University and Chairman of Hong Kong Society of Asia and Pacific Twenty-one

Day 2 16 December, 2003 (Tuesday)

9:00Session 4Governing the Economic and the Social

Deborah Davis, Department of Sociology, Yale University, “Marketing and Administering the Dream of Private Space in Urban China”

Lisa Hoffman, Urban Studies Program, University of Washington, Tacoma, “Governing Through Choice: Neo-Liberal Rule in Late Socialist Urban China”

Matthew Ferchen, Government Department, Cornell University, ‘“Market Order’ and the Governance of the Informal Economy in Nanjing”

Luigi Tomba, Research School of Pacific and Asian Studies, Australian National University, “To Rebel is Justified! Middle-class Activism, Residential Segregation and Community Building in Beijing”

Eric Florence, Centre for Studies on Ethnicity and Migration, University of Liege, Belgium, “Migrant Workers in the Pearl River Delta: How to be a Person From Shenzhen?”

9:00Session 5Globalization, FDI and Economic Restructuring

David R Meyer, Department of Sociology, Brown University, “China Access to Global Capital Networks Through Hong Kong, Shanghai and Taipei”

Simon Xiaobin Zhao, Department of Geography, The University of Hong Kong, “CEPA and Its Impact on HK-PRD-Mainland China”

Tan Wang, Department of Geography, The University of Hong Kong and Donggen Wang, Department of Geography, Hong Kong Baptist University, “The Potentials of Beijing and Shanghai to be China’s Financial Centre: An Analysis of Their Information Hinterlands”

Zhangping Lin and Xiaopei Yan, Centre for Urban and Regional Studies, Zhongshan University, “Temporal and Spatial Disparities of Performance and Potential of Foreign Direct Investment in Guangdong”

11:00Tea Break

11:15Session 6Regional Administrative System Reforms

Him Chung, Department of Geography, Hong Kong Baptist University, “China’s Administrative Hierarchy and Spatial Development”

Jianfa Shen, Department of Geography and Resource Management, The Chinese University of Hong Kong, “Space, Scale, and the State: Re-organizing Urban Space in China”

Andrew M Marton, Institute of Contemporary Chinese Studies, University of Nottingham and Wei Wu, Economic and Trade Bureau, Pudong New Area, “Institutional Reforms and Spatial Restructuring in Pudong New Area”

Yan Hu, Department of Urban and Regional Planning, Zhongshan University, “A Tale of the Zengbu Bridge: Some Reflections on Urban Governance in Guangzhou”

Hanlong Lu, Institute of Sociology, Shanghai Academy of Social Sciences, “The Neighborhood Committee Reform in Urban China: A Comparative Study between Shanghai Model and Shenyang Model”

11:15Session 7Land Reform and Urbanization

Anthony Yeh, Centre of Urban Planning and Environmental Management, The University of Hong Kong, “Dual Land Market and Internal Structure of Chinese Cities”

George C. S. Lin, Department of Geography, The University of Hong Kong, “Urbanization and Non Agricultural Land Use in Post-Reform China”

Xiaopei Yan and Lihua Wei, Centre for Urban and Regional Studies, Zhongshan University, “The Sustainable Urban-Rural Relation in Quickly Urbanized Areas: A Case of Transformation of "Urban Villages" in Metropolis Guangzhou, China”

Shi-mou Yao and Cheng-xin Wang, Nanjing Institute of Geography & Limnology, Chinese Academy of Sciences, “ The Urbanization Pattern of China in the 21st Century”

13:15 Lunch

14:45Session 8Changing Urban Planning Practices

Piper R. Gaubatz, Department of Geosciences, University of Massachusetts, “Central Business Districts,” Globalization and Urban Form in Contemporary Chinese Cities”

Mee Kam Ng, Centre of Urban Planning and Environmental Management, The University of Hong Kong “Globalization, China’s WTO Accession and Sustainable Development in the Hong Kong-Pearl River Delta Region”

Fulong Wu, Department of Geography, University of Southampton, “Globalization, the State, and Planning Re-Orientation in Urban China”

Michael Leaf, School of Community and Regional Planning, University of British Columbia “The Culture of Planning and the Culture of Governance: Modernism and Traditionalism in the Rebuilding of China's Cities”

14:45 Session 9 Migration, Migrants and Residential Pattern in China

Cindy C. Fan, Department of Geography, University of California, Los Angeles, “Interprovincial Migration, Population Redistribution, and Regional Development in China: Data Analysis Based on the 1990 and 2000 Censuses”

Weiping Wu, Department of Urban Studies and Planning, Virginia Commonwealth University, “Migrant Residential Distribution and Metropolitan Spatial Development in Shanghai”

Tai-Chee Wong and Xuan Zhu, and Mun-Ching Yeow, National Institute of Education, Nanyang Technological University, “Building a Global City: Negotiating the Massive Influx of Floating Population in Shanghai”

Yunyan Yang, Yanping Tian, Chengdong Yi and Xiong He, Institute for Population and Regional Studies, Zhongnan University of Economics and Law, “Spatial Dynamics and Intra-city Migration in Wuhan: An Empirical Study”

Erik Mobrand, Department of Politics, Princeton University, “Residential Patterns and Migrant Politics in International Perspective”

16:15 Tea break

16:30Session 10Housing Reform, Inequality and Residential Restructuring

Yapeng Zhu and James Lee, Department of Public and Social Administration, City University of Hong Kong, “ An Enigma Variation in China’s Housing Reform: Reshuffling the Housing Cards in Guiyang”

Youqin Huang, Department of Geography and Planning, State University of New York at Albany, “From Work Unit Compounds to Gated Communities: Housing Inequality and Residential Segregation in Transitional Beijing”

Si-ming Li and Donggen Wang, Department of Geography, Hong Kong Baptist University, “Life Course, Residential Mobility and Urban Restructuring: The Case of Guangzhou”

Eddie Hui and Francis Wong, Department of Building and Real Estate, Hong Kong Polytechnic University, “Housing Marketization in China”

16:30Session 11Population Mobility and the Transmission of HIV/AIDS

Xiushi Yang, Department of Sociology, Old Dominion University, “Community Characteristics and HIV and STD Prevalence in SouthwesternChina”

Guomei Xia, Institute of Sociology, Shanghai Academy of Social Sciences, “Growing Population Mobility and HIV Intervention Among Female Service Workers in China”

Huasong Luo and Kai Jing, Department of Geography, Yunnan Normal University, “Comparative Analysis of HIV Risk Behaviors Among Different Populations in Contemporary Urban China”

Joseph T F Lau and Joe Thomas, Center for Clinical Trials & Epidemiological Research, The Chinese University of Hong Kong, “Risk Behaviors of Hong Kong Male Residents Travellingto Mainland China: A Potential Bridge Population for HIV Infection”

Timothy G. Manchester and Amy Qi, The Futures Group Europe, Karen Hardee, Futures Group International, “What we know about AIDS in China: Reports back for Behavioral Surveillance, HIV/AIDS Knowledge in the General Public, and Interventions with populations at risk in Yunnan and Sichuan”

18:30 Dinner: Sponsored by China Studies Course Advisory Committee, Hong Kong Baptist University

Address by Mr. Edmund Kin On Lau, Chairman of China Studies Course Advisory Committee, Hong Kong Baptist University

Day 3 17 December, 2003 (Wednesday)

9:00Session 12Housing Reform and Residential Restructuring

Peter Li, Faculty of Design, Architecture and Building, University of Technology, Sydney, “Modernization of Housing in China: A Long March into the 21st Century”

Donggen Wang and Si-ming Li, Department of Geography, Hong Kong Baptist University, “Housing Preferences, Rising Income Differentials, and Residential Location in Guangzhou, China: A Stated Preference Approach”

Yu Hong Pan, Francis K. W. Wong and Eddie C. M. Hui, Department of Building and Real Estate, Hong Kong Polytechnic University; Rodney Howes, Construction Industry Council, “The Development of Economical Housing in Chongqing”

Yat-ming Siu, Department of Sociology, Hong Kong Baptist University, “Residential Mobility in Shanghai”

9:00Session 13The Commercial Sex Industry in Contemporary China

Christopher J Smith, Department of Geography and Planning, State University of New York–Albany, “The Social Geography of Disease Transmission in Contemporary China”

Sandra T Hyde, Department of Anthropology, McGill University, “Eating Spring Rice: Transactional Sex In the Age of Epidemics”

Suiming Pan and Yingying Huang, Institute of Sexuality and Gender, Remin University of China, “Levels of Professionalization and Organization of Sex Service and HIV Prevention: A Comparative Study between China Northeast 3 cities and Southeast Shenzhen”

Naiqun Weng, Institute of Ethnology and Anthropology, The Chinese Academy of Social Science “The Socio-Cultural Dynamics of the HIV/AIDS Epidemic in Yunnan China”

Jinling Wang, Zhejiang Academy of Social Sciences, “Women Sex Workers and Male Clients: Gender Perspective”

11:00 Tea Break

11:15Session 14Urban Reforms

Zhiyong Hu, Department of Geography, The University of Hong Kong, “Deconstructing State-owned Enterprises in Socialist China under Reform: A Scalar Interpretation”

Dan He, Kidokoro Tetsuo and Onishi Takashi, Department of Engineering, University of Tokyo, “Urban Regime Model and Its Application on Chinese Urban Development Research”

Fiona F. Yang, Department of Geography, The University of Hong Kong, “Services and China’s Metropolitan Development: The Case of Guangzhou”

Man Shan So and Jianfa Shen, Department of Geography and Resource Management, Chinese University of Hong Kong, “Measuring Urban Competitiveness in China”

11:15Session 15 Consuming the Past for the Present

Albert Wing Tai Wai, Department of Geography, National University of Singapore, “Place Promotion and Iconography in Shanghai’s Xintiandi”

Chun Shing Chow, Department of Geography, Hong Kong Baptist University, “Heritage Preservation and Tourism Development in the Age of Globalization: The Case of the Great Wall of China in Beijing”

Limei Li, Department of Geography, Hong Kong Baptist University, “Analysis of Destination and Tourist Behavior from an Interaction Perspective: A Case Study of Yangshuo, China”

12:45 Lunch

14:00Session 16Development of New Industrial Spaces

Roger C K Chan, Centre of Urban Planning and Environmental Management, University of Hong Kong“Software Industrial Clusters in Pudong, Shanghai: Competitiveness and Embeddedness”

Yongqing Zhang, Department of Business, University of Shanghai for Science and Technology, “Urban Industrial Development in the Central District of Large and Medium Cities in the Background of Globalization: The Development of Urban Industries in Shanghai”

Zongyi Zhang, Urban Planning Department, Tongj University, “Impacts of Development Zones on the Urban Transformation of Major Cities in Yangtze Delta”

Xiaoping Shen, Department of Geography, Central Connecticut State University, Huaitin Yin and Zhe Zhao, Northwest University, “Industrial Restructuring and Urban Space Changes in Xi’an”

14:00 Session 17 Mental Health, Poverty and Social Segregation in Urban China

Gina Lai, Department of Sociology, Hong Kong Baptist University, “ Market Reforms, Gender, and Mental Health in Urban Shanghia”

Li Yao and Danching Ruan, Department of Sociology, Hong Kong Baptist University, “ Multiple Roles and Psychological Distress – A Study of Middle-aged People in Urban China”

Wolfgang Taubmann, Department of Geography, The University of Bremen, “Poverty and Unemployment in Urban China”

Chaolin, Gu, Department of Urban and Resources Sciences, Nanjing University, “Beijing’s Sociospatial Restructuring”

15:30 Tea Break

15:45 Session 18 New Design Practices

Kenneth K.K. Wong, Department of Geography, Hong Kong Baptist University,

“Beijing to become a ‘Green’ Metropolis in 2008: Can the dream come true?”

Haili Zhao, College of Geographic and Environmental Science of Northwest, Normal University “Study in the Characteristic Urbanization Road of the Arid Zone and Regional Planning Management in the Northwest of China – Example of Hexi Corridor”

Jie Zhang, Architecture and Urban Planning Institute, Tongji University, “Research on Strategic Relation/ Connection Between the Central City and New Towns During the Progress of Metropolises Development in China”

Xiaosong Wu, Department of Urban Planning, Sun Yat-sen University, Baizhe Liu, Academe of Urban Planning in Harbin and Gang Hao, Construct Bureau in Harbin City, “Constructing the Ecotype Community and Utilizing the Resource”

Wen Chen and Wenfang Zuo, Nanjing Institute of Geography & Limnology, China Academy of Sciences, “World Factory and the Greening of Industry Firms in Cities”

15:45 Session 19 Restructuring the Chinese City

"An open 'brainstorming' session devoted to a critical assessment of the theoretical significance of China's urban spatial restructuring in the broad contexts of comparative urbanization, globalization and urban change, especially the relationship between form and process. Selected individuals will make brief statements, followed by general discussion. Organized by the “Working Group on Spatial Restructuring Planning and Politics in Urban China, UCRN”

16:45 Working Group Private Business: Setting the Agenda for Year III

17:45Closing Ceremony

Concluding Remarks by

Address by Professor Christopher J Smith, Professor of Department of Geography and Planning, State University of New York at Albany and Chair of the UCRN Working Group

Address by Professor Si-ming Li, Director of Centre for China Urban and Regional Studies, Hong Kong Baptist University and Co-Chair of the UCRN Working Group

Address by Professor Carolyn Cartier, Associate Professor of Geography, University of Southern California, and Co-Chair of the UCRN Working Group