Dr. Hongmei Lu

Vening Meineszgebouw A
Princetonlaan 8a
Kamer 6.70
3584 CB Utrecht

Dr. Hongmei Lu

Researcher
Spatial Planning
h.lu@uu.nl
  • European Research Council Starting Grant project: Collaborative Planning in China: Authoritarian  Institutions, New Media, Power Relations, and Public Spheres. (PI: Dr. Yanliu Lin).

The online public spheres and how they interact with offline public spheres: communicative and agonistic approaches in urban planning.

 

  • Food justice & local food systems in Upper Peninsula of Michigan.

Project 1: Community Food Survey of Western Upper Peninsula Michigan. Funded by Portage Health Foundation & Michigan Technological University Research Excellence Fund Seed Grant. (Co-PI: Dr. Hongmei Lu; PI: Dr. Angie Carter).  https://www.phfgive.org/food

Project 2: “Communities Food Systems Assessment of Western Upper Peninsula Michigan,” supported by Michigan Portage Health Foundation Research Excellence Fund. 2021.   

 

  • Green Roof Policy in Metropolises: Development and Management.  Shanghai Administration of Greening and City Appearance. 2012-2013 (PI: Dr. Hongmei Lu).

 

  • Sino-Dutch Circular-economic Agro-park Planning: Greenport of Chongming Island, Shanghai. Wageningen University, the Netherlands and Transforum, Agribusiness & Rural Areas Program, the Netherlands. 2006-2007 (PI: Dr. Peter Smeets) https://edepot.wur.nl/222976

 

Projects
Project
Collaborative Planning in China: Authoritarian Institutions, New Media, Power Relations, and Public Spheres 01.02.2021 to 31.05.2026
General project description

Collaborative planning has become an effective means to address conflicts of interest in urban renewal and environmental management in China. However, the egalitarian principles that ground collaborative planning theory call into question its validity in China. The theory emphasizes consensus building in which various stakeholders come together for dialogue to address controversial issues. It rests on three assumptions: democratic institutions, neutral power and communicative rationality. These assumptions, which are often debated in the Western context, should clearly be questioned in the Chinese context due to the specific institutions and the challenging nature of power relations. Therefore, the aim of this project is to examine the practices of collaborative planning in China and identify the challenges to the assumptions of the theory. It will develop three novel tracks for examination and reconceptualization. The first will analyze how Chinese political and planning systems, social capital and culture affect the interactive processes. The second will apply network theory and social network analysis to measure various forms of power relations between governments, planners, civil society, and citizens, generated by social networking sites. The third will identify various forms of online public spheres and how they interact with offline public spheres to affect communicative and agonistic approaches to collaborative planning. The research will employ an innovative mixed methods approach combining critical discourse analysis, data mining, computer-assisted content analysis, and social network analysis to research a wide range of case studies. It will lead to a new understanding of collaborative planning in China, and a reconceptualization of the collaborative planning theory.

Role
Researcher
Funding
EU grant funded by the European Research Council (ERC) under the European Union’s Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme (grant agreement No 947879)