首页> 外文期刊>Urban forum >From Overt Opposition to Covert Cooperation: Governance of Street Food Vending in Nanjing, China
【24h】

From Overt Opposition to Covert Cooperation: Governance of Street Food Vending in Nanjing, China

机译:从公开反对到秘密合作:中国南京街头食品贩卖的治理

获取原文
获取原文并翻译 | 示例
获取外文期刊封面目录资料

摘要

In the Global South, the informal food economy is both a source of income for disadvantaged urban groups and an accessible source of food for consumers. Yet, governance of this economy has commonly been restrictive among Southern countries including China. Consequently, in China there has been an antagonistic relationship between vendors and chengguan—China's city management officers. This antagonism has been studied by scholars and reported by Chinese media. In response, several Chinese municipal governments, including Nanjing's, reformed their regulations to formalize street food vending with a permit system. Despite this progress, the reforms are criticized as partial and dismissive of the needs of vendors. This article uses semistructured interviews with street food vendors to evaluate how the reforms affected vendor-chengguan relations and vendors' livelihoods in Nanjing. In contrast to other studies in China, we identified a non-confrontational relationship between some groups of vendors and chengguan. Rather than overt opposition, this relationship is better understood as covert cooperation. Unpermitted practices of street food vending were tolerated by chengguan and the local government, despite restrictive top-down regulations. A few other existing case studies conceptualize the discrepancy between policy and its implementation as ambiguous governance. However, we argue that the term ambiguous governance does not fully capture the complex dynamics in the covert cooperation between vendors and officers in our study. One group of vendors we studied play multiple roles. They were not only petty traders, but also landless farmers who lost their farmland to urbanization. The agreement between these vendors, chengguan, and local government was reached outside the permit system, and was a means of compensating vendors for their lost land. Therefore, the governance mechanism is more accurately conceptualized as compensatory governance. To conclude, we call for further studies on the compensatory governance of street food vendors among Chinese cities, and advocate for community-based bottom-up initiatives to formalize this informal governance.
机译:在全球南方,非正式的粮食经济既是弱势城市群体的收入来源,也是消费者可获得的食物来源。但是,这种经济的治理通常在包括中国在内的南方国家中受到限制。因此,在中国,供应商与中国城市管理人员城关之间存在敌对关系。这种对抗已被学者研究并被中国媒体报道。作为回应,包括南京在内的数个中国城市政府对法规进行了改革,以通过许可证制度使街头食品销售正式化。尽管取得了这些进展,但人们批评这种改革是对供应商需求的部分和不屑一顾。本文使用对街头食品摊贩的半结构化访谈来评估改革如何影响南京的摊贩与城关关系和摊贩的生计。与中国的其他研究相反,我们确定了某些卖主群体与城关之间的非对抗性关系。与其公开反对,不如将这种关系更好地理解为秘密合作。尽管有严格的自上而下的规定,但城关和地方政府仍容忍未经许可的街头食品贩卖行为。现有的其他一些案例研究将政策与其实施之间的差异概念化为模棱两可的治理。但是,我们认为模棱两可的治理一词不能完全反映研究中供应商和管理人员之间秘密合作中的复杂动态。我们研究的一组供应商扮演着多种角色。他们不仅是小商人,而且是因城市化而失去耕地的无地农民。这些供应商,城关和地方政府之间的协议是在许可证制度之外达成的,是补偿供应商损失其土地的一种手段。因此,治理机制可以更准确地概念化为补偿性治理。最后,我们呼吁对中国城市中街头食品摊贩的补偿性治理进行进一步研究,并倡导以社区为基础的自下而上的倡议,以将这种非正式治理形式化。

著录项

  • 来源
    《Urban forum》 |2019年第4期|499-518|共20页
  • 作者单位

    Department of Geography and Environmental Management at University of Waterloo Waterloo Ontario Canada;

    Department of Geographic and Oceanographic Sciences at Nanjing University Nanjing Jiangsu Province China;

  • 收录信息
  • 原文格式 PDF
  • 正文语种 eng
  • 中图分类
  • 关键词

相似文献

  • 外文文献
  • 中文文献
  • 专利
获取原文

客服邮箱:kefu@zhangqiaokeyan.com

京公网安备:11010802029741号 ICP备案号:京ICP备15016152号-6 六维联合信息科技 (北京) 有限公司©版权所有
  • 客服微信

  • 服务号