Ting Xu, London/Beijing. The End of the Urban-Rural Divide? Emerging Quasi-Commons in Rural China

 

Abstract: The urban-rural divide in China was an entrenched feature of Chinese society in the Maoist era. This divide generated and continues to generate inequality as between the rural population and the urban population. In post-Deng China, legal and administrative distinctions between urban and rural have become blurred, especially with the development of rural-urban migration. Nevertheless, the urban-rural divide still exists, and the income of farmers is below that of urban residents. In this paper, it is argued that the emergence of the phenomenon of Òquasi-commonsÓ in rural China, crossing the ÒbordersÓ of the urban-rural divide, may increase farmersÕ income in the future and bridge this divide. The paper focuses on different forms of Òquasi-commonsÓ (the sharing and use of communal land) emerging in rural areas, including the farmland shareholding cooperatives and transforming rural land management rights into shares in joint ventures. There are divergent views held by Chinese academics and policy makers about Òquasi-commonsÓ in rural China, as well as the direction of change in the rural land system. However, most of the proposals for reform have been polarized between nationalization and privatization of rural land. Looking beyond this Òboundary thinkingÓ and drawing on the discourses of Òthe commonsÓ (for example, the writings of Hardin, Heller and Ostrom), this paper analyses the theoretical models of both the nationalization and privatization schemes and their shortcomings. The present essay also analyses the prospect for, and the barriers to the emerging commons in rural China.

 

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