反对城市发展的殖民主义:韩国济州市的上东城市权运动

IF 2.7 2区 经济学 Q1 GEOGRAPHY
Youjeong Oh
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引用次数: 0

摘要

顶洞运动是20世纪80年代末发生在韩国济州岛的针对顶洞公共水回收工程的大规模居民反抗运动。“顶洞运动”最初是当地女性潜水员为生存而进行的斗争,后来发展成为集体行动,揭露项目的非法行为,要求公平分配利润,并主张自决。朝鲜战争结束后,国家主导的济州岛开发在韩国资本主义现代化的过程中发挥了作用,使该岛成为一个可开采的边缘地区。在这种背景下,Top-dong填海项目体现了城市发展项目如何通过剥夺当地社区的土地和生存手段、将公共资源商品化和榨取利润,在当地社区创造殖民条件。济州岛居民的反应是要求具体的权利:女潜水员对公共水和生活资料的集体权利,反对被剥夺;当地居民控制开发利润、反对开采的权利;以及岛民参与决策过程的权利,反对排斥。本文将列斐伏尔的两个概念——殖民化和城市权连接起来,认为历史上的、基于地点的城市权运动揭示了城市发展中涉及的殖民化,并进行了非殖民化的实践。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
AGAINST THE COLONIZATION OF URBAN DEVELOPMENT: The Top-dong Right to the City Movement in Jeju, South Korea

The Top-dong Movement was an extensive residents’ resistance mobilization against the Top-dong Public Water Reclamation project in the late 1980s in Jeju, South Korea. Starting as a local female divers’ struggle for subsistence, the Top-dong Movement grew into a collective action to reveal the illegalities of the project, demand that profits should be fairly shared and assert self-determination. State-led development of Jeju in the post-Korean war period functioned to render the island an extractive periphery during South Korea's capitalist modernization. Within that context, the Top-dong reclamation project exemplifies how urban development projects create colonial conditions in local communities by dispossessing them of land and the means of subsistence, commodifying public resources and extracting profits. Jeju islanders reacted by claiming specific rights: female divers’ collective rights to public water and the means of livelihood against dispossession; local residents’ rights to control developmental profits against extraction; and islanders’ rights to participate in decision-making processes against exclusion. Bridging Lefebvre's two concepts—colonization and the right to the city, this article argues that the historically situated, place-based right to the city movement revealed the colonization involved in urban development and performed practices of decolonization.

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来源期刊
CiteScore
6.70
自引率
3.00%
发文量
58
期刊介绍: A groundbreaking forum for intellectual debate, IJURR is at the forefront of urban and regional research. With a cutting edge approach to linking theoretical development and empirical research, and a consistent demand for quality, IJURR encompasses key material from an unparalleled range of critical, comparative and geographic perspectives. Embracing a multidisciplinary approach to the field, IJURR is essential reading for social scientists with a concern for the complex, changing roles and futures of cities and regions.
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