Immigration and integration : the development of "Chinese" shopping centres in the suburbs of Vancouver
As a step to understand the impact of immigration on urban development in Greater Vancouver, this thesis documents the development processes of "Chinese" Shopping Centres in Vancouver's suburbs over the last decade, examines their roles in the settlement and integration process of...
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ndltd-UBC-oai-circle.library.ubc.ca-2429-93422018-01-05T17:34:41Z Immigration and integration : the development of "Chinese" shopping centres in the suburbs of Vancouver Nan, Jun Chinese Canadians -- British Columbia -- Vancouver -- Social life and customs Chinese Canadians -- British Columbia -- Vancouver -- Economic conditions Shopping centers -- British Columbia -- Vancouver As a step to understand the impact of immigration on urban development in Greater Vancouver, this thesis documents the development processes of "Chinese" Shopping Centres in Vancouver's suburbs over the last decade, examines their roles in the settlement and integration process of Chinese immigrants, and assesses their impact on local communities. "Chinese" Shopping Centres in the Great Vancouver reflected social and physical changes initiated by the Chinese immigration in the Vancouver's suburbs. The developments were driven by dramatic changes in the Chinese-Canadian community in the 1980s and l990s, and boosted by Canada's immigration and integration policy. Overseas investment has also played an important role in making the development possible and more comprehensive. This thesis finds that it is necessary to distinguish "Chinese" Shopping Centre development from traditional forms of ethnic enclaves, such as Chinatown. It is also important to realize the differences between the "Chinese" Shopping Centre and typical shopping centre in North American cities. Socio-economic and land use impacts of the developments call for planning policy changes in order to address the issues related to this new form of development. Applied Science, Faculty of Community and Regional Planning (SCARP), School of Graduate 2009-06-16T23:49:00Z 2009-06-16T23:49:00Z 1999 1999-11 Text Thesis/Dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/2429/9342 eng For non-commercial purposes only, such as research, private study and education. Additional conditions apply, see Terms of Use https://open.library.ubc.ca/terms_of_use. 9909474 bytes application/pdf |
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English |
format |
Others
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Chinese Canadians -- British Columbia -- Vancouver -- Social life and customs Chinese Canadians -- British Columbia -- Vancouver -- Economic conditions Shopping centers -- British Columbia -- Vancouver |
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Chinese Canadians -- British Columbia -- Vancouver -- Social life and customs Chinese Canadians -- British Columbia -- Vancouver -- Economic conditions Shopping centers -- British Columbia -- Vancouver Nan, Jun Immigration and integration : the development of "Chinese" shopping centres in the suburbs of Vancouver |
description |
As a step to understand the impact of immigration on urban development in Greater
Vancouver, this thesis documents the development processes of "Chinese" Shopping Centres
in Vancouver's suburbs over the last decade, examines their roles in the settlement and
integration process of Chinese immigrants, and assesses their impact on local communities.
"Chinese" Shopping Centres in the Great Vancouver reflected social and physical changes
initiated by the Chinese immigration in the Vancouver's suburbs. The developments were
driven by dramatic changes in the Chinese-Canadian community in the 1980s and l990s, and
boosted by Canada's immigration and integration policy. Overseas investment has also
played an important role in making the development possible and more comprehensive.
This thesis finds that it is necessary to distinguish "Chinese" Shopping Centre development
from traditional forms of ethnic enclaves, such as Chinatown. It is also important to realize
the differences between the "Chinese" Shopping Centre and typical shopping centre in North
American cities. Socio-economic and land use impacts of the developments call for planning
policy changes in order to address the issues related to this new form of development. === Applied Science, Faculty of === Community and Regional Planning (SCARP), School of === Graduate |
author |
Nan, Jun |
author_facet |
Nan, Jun |
author_sort |
Nan, Jun |
title |
Immigration and integration : the development of "Chinese" shopping centres in the suburbs of Vancouver |
title_short |
Immigration and integration : the development of "Chinese" shopping centres in the suburbs of Vancouver |
title_full |
Immigration and integration : the development of "Chinese" shopping centres in the suburbs of Vancouver |
title_fullStr |
Immigration and integration : the development of "Chinese" shopping centres in the suburbs of Vancouver |
title_full_unstemmed |
Immigration and integration : the development of "Chinese" shopping centres in the suburbs of Vancouver |
title_sort |
immigration and integration : the development of "chinese" shopping centres in the suburbs of vancouver |
publishDate |
2009 |
url |
http://hdl.handle.net/2429/9342 |
work_keys_str_mv |
AT nanjun immigrationandintegrationthedevelopmentofchineseshoppingcentresinthesuburbsofvancouver |
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1718588254475780096 |