ABSTRACT

The East and Southeast Asia region constitutes the world’s most compelling theatre of accelerated globalization and industrial restructuring. Following a spectacular realization of the ‘industrialization paradigm’ and a period of services-led growth, the early twenty-first century economic landscape among leading Asian states now comprises a burgeoning ‘New Economy’ spectrum of the most advanced industrial trajectories, including finance, the knowledge economy and the ‘new cultural economy’. In an agenda-setting volume, New Economic Spaces in Asian Cities draws on stimulating research conducted by a new generation of urban scholars to generate critical analysis and theoretical insights on the New Economy phenomenon within Asia.

New industry formation and the transformation of older economic practices constitute instruments of development, as well as signifiers of larger processes of change, expressed in the reproduction of space in the city. Asia’s major cities become the key staging areas for the New Economy, driven by the growing wealth of an urban middle and professional class, higher education institutions, city-based inter-regional movements and urban mega-projects. New Economic Spaces in Asian Cites animates this New Economy discourse by means of vibrant storylines of instructive cities and sites, including cases studies situated in cities such as Tokyo, Seoul, Shanghai, Beijing, Shenzhen, and Singapore. Theoretical and normative issues associated with the emergence of the new cultural economy are the subject of the book’s context-setting chapters, and each case study presents an evocative narrative of development interdependencies and exemplary outcomes on the ground.

New Economic Spaces in Asian Cities offers a vivid contribution to our understanding of the ongoing transformation of Asia’s urban system, including the critical intersections of global and local-regional dynamics in processes of new industry formation and the relayering of space in the Asian metropolis. The synthesis of empirical profiles, normative insights, and theoretical reference points enhances the book’s interest for scholars and students in fields of Asian studies, urban and cultural studies, and urban and economic geography, as well as for policy specialists and urban/community planners.

part I|49 pages

Situating the cultural turn in the Asian city

part II|200 pages

The new cultural economy and the reconstruction of space in Asian cities

chapter 5|20 pages

Film festivals in Asian cities

chapter 6|15 pages

Craft and creativity

New economic spaces in Kyoto

chapter 7|16 pages

The diversity of innovation patterns in new industries

The case of “Cool Japan” 1

chapter 8|15 pages

New economic space, policies, and social actors

The development of Kangnam area from urban fringe to the centre of new economy and relational governance

chapter 9|17 pages

Mapping the Hong-Dae area in Seoul

A new and unstable economic space?

chapter 10|16 pages

From ‘Paris of the East' to ‘New York of Asia'?

The (re)development of Shanghai as a financial centre

chapter 11|18 pages

New economy space, new social relations

M50 and Shanghai's new art world in the making

chapter 12|18 pages

Selling place through art

The creation and establishment of Beijing's 798 Art District

chapter 14|17 pages

The cultural economy in the developmental state

A comparison of the Chinatown and Little India districts in Singapore

chapter 15|17 pages

Making/marketing heritage

Chinatowns in Southeast Asia

chapter 16|11 pages

Epilogue

Implications for theory, policy and planning practice