Abstract

This paper is engaged with the critical perspective that highlights the role of the state in the production of urban informality by examining the dynamics of informal land-use practices in Dongguan, China since 1978. Based on in-depth interviews and archival analysis, the relationship between informal land development, the state, and land institution change has been revealed. Our findings show that informal land development is practiced by village collectives from below in Dongguan as a response to the absence and limitation of the national land law. The local government handles the informality in a pragmatic way that serves the goal of economic development in different historical conditions by actions of encouraging, tolerating, and authorizing, suggesting that the definition of informality is not a neutral classification. It is argued that while informality represents people’s creativity in dealing with practical problems, when and to what extent it can be tolerated, formalized, and absorbed depends on the intention of the state in a specific historical context.

Highlights

  • Urbanization in China has progressed rapidly since the reform and opening up in1978, with the proportion of the urban population growing by 60.60% and the urban builtup area increasing by 58,455.66 km2 in 2019 [1]

  • Following the literature of urban informality [19,20], this paper investigates forms and dynamics of informal land-use practices on the part of the local state in the Chinese context with a case study of Changan Town in Dongguan City in the Pearl River Delta (PRD)

  • It examines why and how informal land development is practiced by the local state at the township level in different historical circumstances since 1978 and how it brings about changes to the formal land institution

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Summary

Introduction

1978, with the proportion of the urban population growing by 60.60% and the urban builtup area increasing by 58,455.66 km in 2019 [1]. Following the literature of urban informality [19,20], this paper investigates forms and dynamics of informal land-use practices on the part of the local state in the Chinese context with a case study of Changan Town in Dongguan City in the Pearl River Delta (PRD). It examines why and how informal land development is practiced by the local state at the township level in different historical circumstances since 1978 and how it brings about changes to the formal land institution. The final section discusses the results and their policy implications

Urban Informality: A Mode of State Governance
Institutional Change
Study Case
Method
The Land Institutional Change Led by Informal Land-Use Practices
Some Informal Land-Use Practices Were Accepted by the Local Government
Findings
Conclusions
Full Text
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