Economic Reform and the Comparative Development of Major Chinese Cities

My dissertation is a comparative case study of the developmental trajectories of eight major cities within the People's Republic of China during the post-economic reform period of 1978 to the present: 1) Hong Kong, 2) Guangzhou, 3) Shenzhen, 4) Shanghai, 5) Beijing, 6) Tianjin, 7) Shenyang, and...

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Main Author: Green, Matthew
Other Authors: Galaskiewicz, Joseph
Language:en
Published: The University of Arizona. 2010
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10150/195921
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spelling ndltd-arizona.edu-oai-arizona.openrepository.com-10150-1959212015-10-23T04:43:29Z Economic Reform and the Comparative Development of Major Chinese Cities Green, Matthew Galaskiewicz, Joseph Galaskiewicz, Joseph Galaskiewicz, Joseph Ragin, Charles Kenworthy, Lane My dissertation is a comparative case study of the developmental trajectories of eight major cities within the People's Republic of China during the post-economic reform period of 1978 to the present: 1) Hong Kong, 2) Guangzhou, 3) Shenzhen, 4) Shanghai, 5) Beijing, 6) Tianjin, 7) Shenyang, and 8) Wuhan. Theoretically, I situate this study within the existing research on globalization and cities, most notably work on global cities or world cities, as well as research considering the impact of globalization on the nation-state. By documenting the economic and urban development of each city and analyzing data on various municipal-level indicators (e.g., population growth, foreign direct investment, political connectivity), I attempt to present the causal conditions explaining why some Chinese cities - Shanghai, Beijing, and Hong Kong - have developed into global cities, whereas other cities - Guangzhou, Shenzhen, and Tianjin - have adopted more secondary roles within the Chinese urban system. In addition, I aim to account for why more peripheral cities - Shenyang and Wuhan - have not experienced a comparable level of urban and economic growth. Particular consideration is given to how the development of each city during the post-reform period has been tied to the economic and political policy decisions of the Chinese central government, as well as the importance of political connections between municipal officials and state leadership for attaining global city status. 2010 text Electronic Dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/10150/195921 752261028 11174 en Copyright © is held by the author. Digital access to this material is made possible by the University Libraries, University of Arizona. Further transmission, reproduction or presentation (such as public display or performance) of protected items is prohibited except with permission of the author. The University of Arizona.
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language en
sources NDLTD
description My dissertation is a comparative case study of the developmental trajectories of eight major cities within the People's Republic of China during the post-economic reform period of 1978 to the present: 1) Hong Kong, 2) Guangzhou, 3) Shenzhen, 4) Shanghai, 5) Beijing, 6) Tianjin, 7) Shenyang, and 8) Wuhan. Theoretically, I situate this study within the existing research on globalization and cities, most notably work on global cities or world cities, as well as research considering the impact of globalization on the nation-state. By documenting the economic and urban development of each city and analyzing data on various municipal-level indicators (e.g., population growth, foreign direct investment, political connectivity), I attempt to present the causal conditions explaining why some Chinese cities - Shanghai, Beijing, and Hong Kong - have developed into global cities, whereas other cities - Guangzhou, Shenzhen, and Tianjin - have adopted more secondary roles within the Chinese urban system. In addition, I aim to account for why more peripheral cities - Shenyang and Wuhan - have not experienced a comparable level of urban and economic growth. Particular consideration is given to how the development of each city during the post-reform period has been tied to the economic and political policy decisions of the Chinese central government, as well as the importance of political connections between municipal officials and state leadership for attaining global city status.
author2 Galaskiewicz, Joseph
author_facet Galaskiewicz, Joseph
Green, Matthew
author Green, Matthew
spellingShingle Green, Matthew
Economic Reform and the Comparative Development of Major Chinese Cities
author_sort Green, Matthew
title Economic Reform and the Comparative Development of Major Chinese Cities
title_short Economic Reform and the Comparative Development of Major Chinese Cities
title_full Economic Reform and the Comparative Development of Major Chinese Cities
title_fullStr Economic Reform and the Comparative Development of Major Chinese Cities
title_full_unstemmed Economic Reform and the Comparative Development of Major Chinese Cities
title_sort economic reform and the comparative development of major chinese cities
publisher The University of Arizona.
publishDate 2010
url http://hdl.handle.net/10150/195921
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