Skip to main content

Home/ Groups/ Urbachina
Monique Abud

Across the institutional passage of migration: the hukou system in China - 0 views

  •  
    Luo, Rumin (2012). Across the institutional passage of migration: Hukou system in China. InterDisciplines : journal of history and sociology, 3(1), 120-147.
Monique Abud

Electric vehicles: market opportunities in China - 0 views

  •  
    Hoversten, Shanna, "Electric Vehicles: Market Opportunities in China" (2010). CMC Senior Theses. Paper 1. http://scholarship.claremont.edu/cmc_theses/1 Abstract Electric vehicles (EVs) offer an exciting opportunity in China both in terms of the potential to build a domestic manufacturing base and the potential to create a strong domestic market for the product. The Chinese nation stands to benefit from both supply-side and demand-side promotion due to the economic stimulus from EV manufacturing and export, the environmental benefits of reduced air pollution and reduced greenhouse gas emissions, and the energy security benefits of transitioning away from foreign oil dependence. The Chinese have several advantages when it comes to stimulating EV industry development and EV deployment, including: leadership in battery technology, great potential for cost competitiveness, an enormous and emerging number of new car buyers, and high level government support. Yet a number of challenges must be taken into account as well, including: shortfalls in overall automobile R&D spending, consumer concerns about Chinese cars' safety and reliability, enhancing the appeal of the Chinese brand, and heavy national infrastructure demands. This paper will seek to examine the opportunities and challenges associated with EV deployment in China and identify industry actions and policy measures to facilitate the process.
Monique Abud

Resisting motorization in Guangzhou - 0 views

  •  
    Zacharias, John (2012) Resisting motorization in Guangzhou. Habitat International, 36 (1). pp. 93-100. Private motorization has accompanied unprecedented urbanization in China, as a matter of public policy. Planning at the provincial and city levels has supported the rapid build-up of the private car fleet in major cities through the development of regional and urban highway networks, higher capacity local streets and much higher standards for car parking in new developments. By contrast, urban planning until 1994 concentrated on the building of community and the support for a non-motorized lifestyle. Guangzhou experienced particularly rapid city-building during this period because it was at the centre of the market reforms launched in 1978. The communities that were built form a broad ring around the historic core of the city, constituting one of the most significant obstacles to government ambitions to maintain the recent growth rates in car ownership. Guangyuan and Jiangnanxi are examples of such middle-class, home-owning communities where daily life remains almost exclusively non-motorized. Self-organized groups in the community are increasingly vocal and active in their demands to enhance local environmental quality and restrict local motorization. Local municipal authorities, although increasingly active and autonomous, try to strike a balance between government objectives and local demands. The application of motorization illustrates the growing gap between high-level policy and grassroots urban planning in Guangzhou.
Monique Abud

Heritage-led eco-regeneration: the case of Zhejiang water towns protection, restoration... - 0 views

  •  
    Luciano Cessari, Elena Gigliarelli In: Progress in Cultural Heritage Preservation Lecture Notes in Computer Science Volume 7616, 2012, pp 369-377 Abstract Climate change have impacts on many sectors: land use, housing, transportation, public health, water supply and sanitation, solid waste, food security, and energy. This article presents the results of the project SECHURBA, financed by European funds, whose purpose was to examine the potential of environmental protection and sustainability in historic cities, documenting barriers and prospects of various historical communities with diversity in Europe. Critical objectives which were achieved, such as 'Historic Community Climate Change Strategies', assessment tools, route maps to intervene in areas such culturally sensitive, are under implementation in historic urban areas in Popular Republic of China. Through the application to some typical towns and villages in the Chinese province of Zeijang the outcomes of SECHURBA will developed to outline a set of actions and tools that will call 'Historic Cities Regeneration by Climate Change Strategies'. Online at: http://link.springer.com/chapter/10.1007%2F978-3-642-34234-9_37?LI=true
Monique Abud

SUSTAINABLE - THE URBAN MODEL BASED ON HIGH-DENSITY, HIGHRISE AND MULTIPLE, INTENSIVE L... - 0 views

  •  
    Siu Yu Lau, Stephen Gonzalez Martinez Paula In: ACE©, AÑO 7 núm.20, OCTUBRE 2012 China is going through one of the most dramatic social and cultural transformations in its history. In this speed change scenario, the never - questioned conventions in the western architecture have been betrayed. Invention, reinterpretation sometimes even revolution, never represent a step further as they did in the XXI century theoretical thinking. To engage architectural thoughts with the booming economy could contribute to the definition of a contemporary Chinese architecture, far from the generic city, in a society that has evolved from pre-modernism to post-industrialism in a short period of time. Through the analysis of Hong Kong, and a series of case studies, a conclusion to this scenario is sought.
Monique Abud

1st annual UKNA roundtable: Urban heritage policies - 0 views

  •  
    Sunday, 4 November, 2012 to Tuesday, 6 November, 2012 Delft University of Technology, Faculty of Architecture, Berlage Zalen Julianalaan 134 Delft 2628 BL Netherlands The Delft Roundtable will be the first of four major, annual events bringing together all partner institutes of the Urban Knowledge Network Asia (UKNA).
Monique Abud

Transformations urbaines en Chine - 0 views

  •  
    Architectures / Mutations, n° de mars 2012. Chine, métamorphose des villes. Dans une culture globalisée et numérisée, comment valoriser les ressources attachées au lieu ? Quelles proximités redéfinir, pour quels habitats ? Quelles nouvelles formes donner aux enveloppes qui abritent les activités humaines ? Comment organiser la densité urbaine qu'appelle le développement des villes ? Éthique : quelles relations entre les personnes qui habitent la ville et ceux qui la programment et la financent ? Fondée il y a dix ans sur le site historique des Beaux-Arts, l'école nationale supérieure d'architecture de Paris-Malaquais ouvre ici la discipline à l'expérience de situations urbaines nouvelles, au travers de projets menés en Chine avec des écoles d'architecture chinoises.
Monique Abud

Aspects of Urbanization in China : Shanghai, Hong Kong, Guangzhou - 0 views

  •  
    Gregory Bracken, Aspects of urbanization in China : Shanghai, Hong Kong, Guangzhou, Amsterdam university press, 2012, 212 p. Abstract : China's rise is one of the transformative events of our time. Aspects of urbanization in China: Shanghai, Hong Kong, Guangzhou examines some of the aspects of China's massive wave of urbanization - the largest the world has ever seen. The various papers in the book, written by academics from different disciplines, represent ongoing research and exploration and give a useful snapshot in a rapidly developing discourse. Their point of departure is the city - Shanghai, Hong Kong and Guangzhou - where the downside of China's miraculous economic growth is most painfully apparent. And it is concern for the citizens of these cities that unifies the papers in a book whose authors seek to understand what life is like for the people who call them home. Disponible en ligne, intégralement, à l'adresse : http://www.oapen.org/search?identifier=418533;keyword=bracken
Monique Abud

Sinapolis - 0 views

  •  
    Sinapolis est un atelier d'études et de ressources sur la ville et les environnements construits chinois. Sinapolis propose, à travers un concept original mariant expertise urbaine, diffusion des savoirs et nouveaux médias, une approche actualisée de l'urbain chinois sous ses formes les plus diverses : histoire, pratiques, acteurs, représentation, tendances, localités...
Monique Abud

Promenons-nous dans les villes... - 0 views

  •  
    Cliquer sur le lien en bas de la page pour télécharger le PDF de l'article. Bruno J. Hubert, architecte et enseignement à l'Ecole Nationale Supérieure d'Architecture Paris-Malaquais (ENSAPM), et Jérémie Descamps ont collaboré de 2004 à aujourd'hui, mettant en place des conventions d'échanges universitaires avec les universités chinoises, avec l'aide de l'Observatoire de la Chine contemporaine de la Cité de l'architecure et du patrimoine. Chaque année, un workshop universitaire a permis à des étudiants français et chinois de travailler ensemble, sur des sites représentant et problématisant la Chine urbaine et ses mouvements. Sept parties de l'article revisitent sept sites étudiés et retracent leurs mutations ; à Pékin - Pingguo Sequ, Wangjing, Maliandao, Gaobedian, Wanfotang ; à Hanzhou- Qiantangjiang et Zhijiang. "Promenons-nous dans les villes..." Contribution de Jérémie Descamps pour Bruno J. Hubert, Architectures / Mutations, Transformations urbaines en Chine, Publication de l'Ecole nationale supérieure d'architecture de Paris-Malaquais et de la Cité de l'architecture et du patrimoine, 2012
Jacqueline Nivard

China's Real Estate Bubble Bursts -- Good or Bad? - 2 views

  •  
    China's Real Estate Bubble Bursts -- Good or Bad? The latest outlook from the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) says China's real estate market fluctuations are a major threat to its growth next year.
Jacqueline Nivard

CASS: China's Property Bust Could "Fatally Impact" the Economy - 1 views

  •  
    As China's real estate market continues to cool, experts have warned that a collapse in the market could spell disaster for the economy. This poses a dilemma for the Chinese regime. Sky-high property prices can fuel social tensions, but a reverse of the property boom could damage Beijing's bid to maintain the economy.
Jacqueline Nivard

Protecting China's natural habitat feels like a game - 0 views

  •  
    In a new short documentary, 'Hopeful', Jonah Kessel shows the work of environmental NGO Friends of Nature in using new laws to hold companies accountable for their pollution. The film focuses on a Yunnan "cancer village" and Friends of Nature activist Chang Cheng, who says: "Sometimes trying to protect China's natural habitat feels like playing a game, because we have an opponent. Every time we advance, so do they. Sometimes it feels as though we cannot move at all. But there are still those of us who remain hopeful."
Jacqueline Nivard

The Centre for Urban History in China and Colombia - 0 views

  •  
    n the spring of 2012 staff from the Centre for Urban History at the University of Leicester travelled to China and Colombia.
Jacqueline Nivard

Sustainable seafood and integrated fish farming in China - 0 views

  •  
    The story is about 'Integrated Fish Farming', using traditional methods that have been adapted to modern circumstances, and opportunities to apply these as a low ecological footprint fish farming model.
Jacqueline Nivard

sustainable china researching religious values for ecological sustainability - 0 views

  •  
    This blog contains information and ideas about the interrelationship of religion, nature and modernity with a focus on China. The underlying premises are that religious values and ideas are key resources for constructing a sustainable future for the human species, and that nowhere on the planet is this more important than China. China is the world's largest country by population, the second largest economy in real GDP terms, and the largest emitter of greenhouse gases.
Jacqueline Nivard

Residual wage inequality in urban China, 1995-2007 - 0 views

  •  
    We use three waves of urban household survey from 1995 to 2007 to investigate the trends of residual inequality and its determinants.
Jacqueline Nivard

Identity, inequality, and happiness: evidence from urban China - 0 views

  •  
    This paper presents the impact of income inequality on subjective well-being using data from the 2002 Chinese Household Income Project (CHIP) Survey.
Jacqueline Nivard

Urban villages and housing values in China - 1 views

  •  
    The presence of urban villages is a unique product of China's urbanization. In this article, we explore the effects of urban villages on the formal housing market.
Jacqueline Nivard

Urban Public Pension and Economic Growth in China - 0 views

  •  
    We examine the effects of the firm contribution rate and individual contribution rate on the per capita income growth rate, population growth rate, saving rate and education expense rate.
‹ Previous 21 - 40 of 220 Next › Last »
Showing 20 items per page