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Invisible fish: The selective (dis)connection of elite Chinese gated community residents from urban public space

Author

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  • Yixin Liu

    (Shenzhen University, China)

  • Rowland Atkinson

    (University of Sheffield, UK)

Abstract

Gated communities remain identified with strong forms of socio-physical segregation, yet there has been relatively light engagement with the question of how their residents engage with the city more broadly. This relationship, of protected privacy to open public space, is important because segregation is found in modes of mobility as well as in fixed residential spaces. This article contributes to the understanding of mobile forms of segregation by examining the use of public space, and sites of work, leisure and city services, by the (upper) middle-class residents of two high-end gated communities in Zhanjiang, a middle-tier Chinese city. In these relatively new elite residential spaces, newly status-conscious inhabitants reveal how their use of private modes of travel, avoidance of public transportation systems and efforts at seamless traversal of urban spaces connect to ideas of social achievement. Through extensive qualitative fieldwork in these two sites, we are granted a privileged insight into the ways in which China’s nascent middle classes utilise shielded addresses from which to access what they see as status-conferring lifestyle and taste destinations through private modes of mobility.

Suggested Citation

  • Yixin Liu & Rowland Atkinson, 2025. "Invisible fish: The selective (dis)connection of elite Chinese gated community residents from urban public space," Urban Studies, Urban Studies Journal Limited, vol. 62(2), pages 347-366, February.
  • Handle: RePEc:sae:urbstu:v:62:y:2025:i:2:p:347-366
    DOI: 10.1177/00420980241256746
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    References listed on IDEAS

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