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People-led Urban Development in Vietnam: Interstitial Practices and the Production of Differential Spaces in Hanoi [Kietas viršelis]

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"This book provides an analysis of urban development in Vietnam with a focus on activities carried out by ordinary people. Using Hanoi as a case study, the book offers a rich ethnographic account of people-led development emphasizing spatial practices ofthe emerging middle/lower-middle and small entrepreneurial class. Through integrating the concept of interstitial practice with Lefebvre's framework of the production of differential space to conceptualise the diverse and seemingly ad-hoc space-making activities of urban residents, situating these in relation to the state's disciplining projects through housing and urban planning. Moving beyond a simplistic, dichotomised discussion of informality and formality, temporality and permanence, the book highlights the tensions between the state visions of modernized urbanisation and everyday space-making practices of ordinary people. It offers a substantive narrative and an in-depth analysis of the power relations, social hierarchies, and complex interactions that are embedded within the differential spaces created by diverse interstitial practices in Hanoi. As a novel contribution to the literature highlighting entrepreneurialism of the subaltern, and the role of ordinary people in urban development, the bookwill be of interest to researchers of Vietnam's urban development, Southeast Asian Studies, Urban Studies and the Global South"--

This book provides an analysis of urban development in Vietnam with a focus on activities carried out by ordinary people. Using Hanoi as a case study, the book offers a rich ethnographic account of people-led development emphasizing spatial practices of the emerging middle/lower-middle and small entrepreneurial class.

Through integrating the concept of interstitial practice with Lefebvre’s framework of the production of differential space, this study conceptualises the diverse and seemingly ad-hoc space-making activities of urban residents and situates them in relation to the state’s disciplining projects through housing and urban planning. Moving beyond a simplistic, dichotomised discussion of informality and formality, temporality and permanence, the book highlights the tensions between the state visions of modernized urbanisation and everyday space-making practices of ordinary people. It offers a substantive narrative and an in-depth analysis of the power relations, social hierarchies, and complex interactions that are embedded within the differential spaces created by diverse interstitial practices in Hanoi.

As a novel contribution to the literature highlighting entrepreneurialism of the subaltern, and the role of ordinary people in urban development, the book will be of interest to researchers of Vietnam’s urban development, Southeast Asian Studies, Urban Studies and the Global South.



This book provides an analysis of urban development in Vietnam with a focus on activities carried out by ordinary people. Using Hanoi as a case study, the book offers a rich ethnographic account of people-led development emphasizing spatial practices of the emerging middle/lower-middle and small entrepreneurial class.

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Chapter 1: Introduction

Chapter 2: The Production Of Differential Space Through Interstitial
Practices

Chapter 3: The KTT café: interstitial practices in old socialist housing
areas

Chapter 4: Tensions and synergies between the urban and the rural, order and
disorder: The streets markets beside the New Urban Areas

Chapter 5: Interstitial housing practices: mini apartments in Hanoi

Chapter 6: Borderlands and liminal spaces: interstitial practices in an
in-between street

Chapter 7: Conclusion
Hoąi Anh Trn is Associate Professor at the Department of Urban Studies, Malmö University. Trans research investigates urban and housing policies, urban space production, and public spaces. Her research in Vietnam highlights the role of ordinary people in the production of housing and urban spaces, as well as in the shaping of housing and urban development policies.

Ngai Ming YIP was professor of housing and urban studies in the Department of Public and International Affairs in the City University of Hong Kong before his retired in 2023. He researches on urban and housing issues with a focus on the neigbhourhood and resident organisations in changing urban and political contexts. He has been active in both the academic, policy and professional communities.