Public Rental Housing Governance in Urban China

Essence, Mechanisms and Measurement

Doctoral Thesis (2021)
Author(s)

J. Yan (TU Delft - Housing Institutions & Governance)

Contributor(s)

MG Elsinga – Promotor (TU Delft - Housing Institutions & Governance)

M.E.A. Haffner – Copromotor (TU Delft - Housing Institutions & Governance)

Research Group
Housing Institutions & Governance
Copyright
© 2021 J. Yan
DOI related publication
https://doi.org/10.7480/abe.2021.01
More Info
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Publication Year
2021
Language
English
Copyright
© 2021 J. Yan
Research Group
Housing Institutions & Governance
Bibliographical Note
A+BE I Architecture and the Built Environment No 1 (2021)@en
ISBN (print)
978-94-6366-374-8
Reuse Rights

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Abstract

Recently, Chinese Public Rental Housing (PRH) provision has witnessed a shift from ‘government’ to ‘governance’: policy making shifted from government steering to mixed forms involving government, market and civic actors to pursue effective and fair policies. In the meantime, this new-era PRH governance is credited with mixed results. However, the existing studies fail to describe the mechanisms underlying this new-era governance of PRH with the rising involvement of market actors and those in civil society and whether the new-era governance is considered to be effective, achieving the objective of stability. Therefore, this PhD research aims to fill the two research gaps through building a better understanding of the PRH governance in the current Chinese context and evaluating PRH governance. To fulfil this aim, this dissertation is underpinned by a theoretical foundation from the governance perspective and adopts a mixedmethod approach with quantitative and qualitative data in the study of Chinese PRH provision. The dissertation reveals the essence of the current Chinese PRH governance by bringing forth a governance model and shows the structures and mechanisms for non-governmental actors to play a role in the governance of PRH. The dissertation also shows the perceived governance outcomes from tenants’ perspective and demonstrates two main governance challenges of Inclusionary Housing, a newly introduced instrument adopted in the Chinese PRH governance. Based on the results, this PhD research theoretically and empirically contributes to the h ture.