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For most, the term "public space" conjures up images of large, open areas: community centers for meetings and social events; the ancient Greek agora for political debates; green parks for festivals and recreation. In many of the world's major cities, however, public spaces like these are not a part of the everyday lives of the public. Rather, business and social lives have always been conducted along main roads and sidewalks. With increasing urban growth and density, primarily from migration and immigration, rights to the sidewalk are being hotly contested among pedestrians, street vendors, property owners, tourists, and governments around the world. With Sidewalk City, Annette Miae Kim provides the first multidisciplinary case study of sidewalks in a distinctive geographical area. She focuses on Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam, a rapidly growing and evolving city that throughout its history, her multicultural residents have built up alternative legitimacies and norms about how the sidewalk should be used. Based on fieldwork over 15 years, Kim developed methods of spatial ethnography to overcome habitual seeing, and recorded both the spatial patterns and the social relations of how the city's vibrant sidewalk life is practiced. In Sidewalk City, she transforms this data into an imaginative array of maps, progressing through a primer of critical cartography, to unveil new insights about the importance and potential of this "idian public space. This richly illustrated and fascinating study of Ho Chi Minh City's sidewalks shows us that it is possible to have an aesthetic sidewalk life that is inclusive of multiple publics' aspirations and livelihoods, particularly those of migrant vendors.
Sidewalks --- Public spaces --- ho chi minh city, public space, community centers, parks, festivals, recreation, urban, migration, immigration, sidewalk, streets, tourism, government, property owners, street vendors, pedestrians, vietnam, ethnography, geography, sociology, anthropology, planning, development, nonfiction, asia, cartography, mapmaking, heritage protection, cholon district, saigon.
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Examines Ho Chi Minh City's first generation of entrepreneurs to find that a city-wide reconstruction of cognitive paradigms enabled them and others to transform Vietnam from a poor centrally planned economy into one of the fastest-growing market economies in the world, despite ignoring conventional reform strategies.
Capitalism --- Entrepreneurship --- Vietnam --- Economic policy.
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