On Thursday 23 May 2024, X. Zhang will defend the doctoral thesis titled: ‘From Dilemma to Balance: Urban Conservation and (Re)development in the Mainland of China‘.
- Promotor
- Co-promotor
- Date
- Thursday 23 May 2024, 10:30 - 12:00
- Type
- PhD defence
- Space
- Senate Hall
- Building
- Erasmus Building
- Location
- Campus Woudestein
Brief summary of the doctoral thesis:
Conserving urban heritage is a part of one of the Sustainable Development Goals (SDG 11.4). The main goal of this research is to provide theoretical understanding and practical suggestions for balancing urban conservation and development in rapidly urbanizing and modernizing countries. The contributions of this thesis are: (1) it provides clear concept and interpretations of urban heritage and summarizes the governance modes in urban heritage management by conducting a systematic literature review; (2) it collates the trajectory of policy evolution concerning urban conservation over a century, based on which, the heritage conservation policy layering is summarized as drift, stagnation, hysteresis, and adjustment connected with conversions; additionally, the transformation of the urban conservation and (re)development relationship from dilemma to balance is also explained with two reasons: urban conservation is lagging behind urban development, and there is a gap between policy making and implementation capacity; (3) it summarizes current cultural heritage governance patterns with policy analysis; (4) It combines the theories of social movements and of governance with the conceptual framework of community initiative and government response interactions and enriches community-initiated urban conservation studies by exploring the sequence and configuration of factors; (5) It provides a policy database for future research.
- More information
The public defence will begin exactly at 10.30 hrs. The doors will be closed once the public defence starts, latecomers may be able to watch on the screen outside. There is no possibility of entrance during the first part of the ceremony. Due to the solemn nature of the ceremony, we recommend that you do not take children under the age of 6 to the first part of the ceremony.