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The Changing Significance of Neighbouring: From Socialist to Post-socialist China

Zheng Wang (The University of Sheffield UK)

Neighbours Around the World: An International Look at the People Next Door

ISBN: 978-1-80043-370-0, eISBN: 978-1-83909-476-7

Publication date: 18 August 2022

Abstract

In an urbanising world, neighbouring is perceived to be steadily losing significance and a remnant of the past. The same belief can also be found in China where rapid urbanisation has had a tremendous impact on the social networks and neighbourhood life of urban residents. This chapter challenges the common perception of neighbouring in demise and argues that neighbouring remains an important form of social relationship, even if the meanings and role of neighbouring have changed. This chapter first charts the changing role of neighbouring from the socialist era to post-reform China. It then provides an account of four common types of neighbourhoods in Chinese cities – work-unit estates, traditional courtyards, commodity housing estates and urban villages – and considers how and why neighbouring in different ways still matters to them. In pre-reform socialist China, neighbourhood life and neighbouring comprised much of the daily social life of residents. Since the reform era, with the proliferation of private commodity housing estates, middle-class residents prioritise comfort, security and privacy, such that neighbouring levels have subsided. Nevertheless, in other neighbourhood types, such as work-unit housing estates, traditional courtyards and urban villages, neighbours still rely upon one another for various reasons.

Keywords

Citation

Wang, Z. (2022), "The Changing Significance of Neighbouring: From Socialist to Post-socialist China", Cheshire, L. (Ed.) Neighbours Around the World: An International Look at the People Next Door, Emerald Publishing Limited, Leeds, pp. 19-36. https://doi.org/10.1108/978-1-83909-476-720221002

Publisher

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Emerald Publishing Limited

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