Shenjing He
University of Hong Kong
104 Papers
178 Citations
Shenjing He is an academic researcher from University of Hong Kong. The author has contributed to research in topics: China & Urbanism. The author has an hindex of 28, co-authored 88 publications. Previous affiliations of Shenjing He include Cardiff University & Sun Yat-sen University.
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Papers
Property Rights Redistribution, Entitlement Failure and the Impoverishment of Landless Farmers in China
TL;DR: In this article, the authors analyzed the impoverishment of farmers caught up in China's relentless urban expansion program, using the perspectives of property rights and entitlements, and presented case studies of two villages in Xi'an to illustrate how farmers' entitlement sets and vulnerability to poverty have changed as a result of changes in land rights.
Healthcare in cumulatively caused migration: Hong Kong residents’ perceived Mainland healthcare quality and migration intentions in the Greater Bay Area, China
Xiang Yan,Shenjing He +1 more
TL;DR: In this paper , a more nuanced understanding by considering the subjective dimension of healthcare quality as an important part of the cumulative causation of migration thesis was provided, where significant conditional mediating effects of perceived Mainland healthcare quality in reproducing HK-to-Mainland migrations were found.
Poverty concentration and determinants in China's urban low-income neighbourhoods and social groups.
TL;DR: Poverty concentration is measured across different types of neighbourhood and different groups in China, finding the highest concentrations are found in dilapidated inner-city neighbourhoods and among the laid-off/unemployed.
State-led creative/cultural city making and its contestations in East Asia: A multi-scalar analysis of the entrepreneurial state and the creative class
Shenjing He,Jun Wang +1 more
TL;DR: In this article, the authors present a fresh and enriched understanding of the making of creative/cultural cities in East Asia and the emerging contestations based on two sets of interrelated analyses: first, a multi-scalar analysis of the role of the state in making creative and cultural clusters; and second, the discontent and resistance of the creative class and wider social groups against top-down strategies.
Unravelling residential satisfaction and relocation intention in three urban neighborhood types in Guangzhou, China
TL;DR: Wang et al. as discussed by the authors examined determinants of residential satisfaction and relocation intention in each residential segment and found that residential satisfaction is influenced by different factors in the three types of residential neighborhoods, but is generally shaped by community attachment and the housing facilities.