
Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Table of Contents
- Abbreviations
- Acknowledgements
- 1 Emerging Civic Urbanisms in Asia: An Introduction
- 2 Walking Tours and Community Heritage in Singapore: Civic Activism in the Making in Queenstown and Geylang
- 3 Resistance and Resilience: A Case Study of Rebuilding the Choi Yuen Village in Hong Kong
- 4 Urban Planning, Public Interest, and Spatial Justice: A Case Study of the Lo-Sheng Sanatorium Preservation Movement in Taipei
- 5 Placemaking as Social Learning: Taipei’s Open Green Programme as Pedagogical Civic Urbanism
- 6 Hong Kong’s Urban Renewal Fund: A Step towards Citizen-driven Placemaking?
- 7 Re-emerging Civic Urbanism: The Evolving State–Civil Society Relations in Community Building in Seoul
- 8 A Shifting Paradigm of Urban Regeneration in Seoul?: A Case Study of Citizen Participation in Haebangchon Urban Regeneration Project
- 9 Building Communities through Neighbourhood-based: Participatory Planning in Singapore
- 10 Beyond the Sunday Spectacle: Foreign Domestic Workers and Emergent Civic Urbanisms in Hong Kong
- 11 Holding Space, Making Place: Nurturing Emergent Solidarities within New Food Systems in Singapore
- 12 Conclusion: Civic Urbanisms and Urban Governance in Asia and Beyond
- Index
- Publications/Global Asia
3 - Resistance and Resilience: A Case Study ofRebuilding the Choi Yuen Village in HongKong
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 19 November 2022
- Frontmatter
- Table of Contents
- Abbreviations
- Acknowledgements
- 1 Emerging Civic Urbanisms in Asia: An Introduction
- 2 Walking Tours and Community Heritage in Singapore: Civic Activism in the Making in Queenstown and Geylang
- 3 Resistance and Resilience: A Case Study of Rebuilding the Choi Yuen Village in Hong Kong
- 4 Urban Planning, Public Interest, and Spatial Justice: A Case Study of the Lo-Sheng Sanatorium Preservation Movement in Taipei
- 5 Placemaking as Social Learning: Taipei’s Open Green Programme as Pedagogical Civic Urbanism
- 6 Hong Kong’s Urban Renewal Fund: A Step towards Citizen-driven Placemaking?
- 7 Re-emerging Civic Urbanism: The Evolving State–Civil Society Relations in Community Building in Seoul
- 8 A Shifting Paradigm of Urban Regeneration in Seoul?: A Case Study of Citizen Participation in Haebangchon Urban Regeneration Project
- 9 Building Communities through Neighbourhood-based: Participatory Planning in Singapore
- 10 Beyond the Sunday Spectacle: Foreign Domestic Workers and Emergent Civic Urbanisms in Hong Kong
- 11 Holding Space, Making Place: Nurturing Emergent Solidarities within New Food Systems in Singapore
- 12 Conclusion: Civic Urbanisms and Urban Governance in Asia and Beyond
- Index
- Publications/Global Asia
Summary
Abstract
This chapter employs a synthesized theoreticalframework to interpret the struggles of Choi YuenVillage (CYV), a non-indigenous yet closely knitmultigenerational village, when the governmentdecided to remove it in 2008 to make way for anemergency rescue station for the Express Rail Link(ERL) that connects Hong Kong with China. Unlikeindigenous villages, non-indigenous ones are notentitled to village reconstruction if affected bygovernment projects. CYV, therefore, resisted thedecision. Resilience of the village was boosted bythe broader anti-ERL social movement. Although CYVwas eventually removed, many stakeholders withinand outside the government on opposite sides ofthe controversy helped rebuild CYV as aneco-village, an unprecedented and unique case thatrealized socio-spatial justice for non-indigenousvillagers.
Keywords: Community resistance,resilience, social capital, rural development,Hong Kong
Introduction
While there is a rich set of literature on communityresilience in the face of climate crisis and naturaldisasters (Berkes and Jolly, 2002; Berkes and Ross,2013; Brown, Dayal, and Del Rio, 2012; Pfefferbaum,Pfefferbaum, Van Horn, Klomp, Norris, and Reissman,2013) as well as on relationships between resilienceand urban planning or power relationships (Bahadurand Tanner, 2014; Brown, 2014; Davoudi, 2012;Jabareen, 2013; Lombardi, Leach, Rogers, and theUrban Future Team, 2012; Wilkinson, 2012; Wilson,2014), few (Amundsen, 2012; Maguire and Cartwright,2008; Wilson, 2013) have attempted to use theconcept of resilience to understand the emergence ofcommunity-based actions to counteractstate-initiated spatial injustice and to protectpeople's rights to use space. This chapter is anattempt to tell the story of a community that triedto rebuild itself in the midst of a seemingly unjustinstitutional and political context. This case studyillustrates how a community leveraged internal andexternal resources to counteract the state'sentrenched unjust spatial practices, resulting ingetting what ‘they morally deserve’ (Sandel, 2009:10) – the rebuilding of their multigenerationalvillage.
This chapter views resilience from a cultural geographyperspective, examining ‘how cultures, individualsand societies are responding to changes’ (Denevan,1983 cited in Amundsen, 2012: 46). Berkes and Ross(2013: 6) define community resilience as the‘existence, development and engagement of communityresources by community members to thrive in anenvironment characterised by change, uncertainty,unpredictability and surprise’.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Emerging Civic Urbanisms in AsiaHong Kong, Seoul, Singapore, and Taipei beyondDevelopmental Urbanization, pp. 71 - 94Publisher: Amsterdam University PressPrint publication year: 2022