Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
7353488 | Geoforum | 2018 | 13 Pages |
Abstract
This article explains the gentrification process in Chengdu, China, during the 2000s from a sociocultural perspective. It examines the spatial pattern of and correlations within gentrification in the inner city of Chengdu and embeds the gentrification process within the context of post-socialist societal transition in major Chinese cities. The research reveals that while state-led urban strategies provided the initial impetus of gentrification in Chengdu, the consumer revolution has awakened personal consumption as a force sustaining its development. Gentrifiers in Chengdu were constituted by a cohort of high-income consumers of varying socioeconomic backgrounds but collectively motivated by a new urbanism privileging the accumulation of social and cultural capital. Moreover, political-economic elites have led the creation of this new urbanism and oriented the sociocultural change of inner-city gentrifiers. Consequently, this article argues that a consumer class, replacing a socioeconomic class, has nurtured class-related urban change and, consequently, social conflict in certain inner-city areas. State and society interactions, rather than state or society domination, have determined the characteristics of gentrification in Chengdu.
Keywords
Related Topics
Social Sciences and Humanities
Economics, Econometrics and Finance
Economics and Econometrics
Authors
Qinran Yang, Min Zhou,