Ending Gated Communities: The Rationales for Resistance in China
Chiu-Shee, Colleen, Brent Ryan, and Lawrence Vale (2021). Ending Gated Communities: the Rationales for Resistance in China. Housing Studies, DOI: 10.1080/02673037.2021.1950645
41 Pages Posted: 15 Feb 2024
Date Written: July 30, 2021
Abstract
Although gated communities have spread globally, their prevalence in China is often attributed to China’s unique tradition of gated living. In 2015, China announced a policy recommendation intending to end gated communities, which faced societal resistance. To elucidate the nature of this resistance, we interviewed experienced Chinese officials, practitioners, and scholars—who, inevitably, were themselves gated-community residents. They challenge the policy in two ways: policy-rejectors justify gating as common sense and stress risks of ungating, whereas policy-sympathizers understand the policy shift but doubt its feasibility. Their rationales reveal ingrained cognitive dissonance and entrenched state-society tension. Such sentiments that resist ungating collectively create practical and ideological barriers to mitigating housing segregation. China’s gated communities showcase how private production of civic goods prioritizes market rules and promotes individual values. China’s failure in ungating suggests that the prevalence of privately produced communities can justify exclusion, normalize “gated mindsets,” and reinforce socioeconomic and spatial inequalities.
Keywords: ending gated communities, social resistance, provision of public goods, housing development, gated mindsets, China
Suggested Citation: Suggested Citation