Yang Yang
National University of Singapore
7 Papers
14 Citations
Yang Yang is an academic researcher from National University of Singapore. The author has contributed to research in topics: China & Urbanism. The author has an hindex of 4, co-authored 6 publications. Previous affiliations of Yang Yang include University of Colorado Boulder.
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Papers
China's Belt and Road Initiative: Views from the ground.
TL;DR: This special issue examines the BRI as a relational, contested process - a bundle of intertwined discourses, policies, and projects that sometimes align but are sometimes contradictory, and moves beyond policy-level, macro-economic, and classic geopolitical analysis to study China's global investments “from the ground”.
141
Producing multiple imaginations of the Silk Road in Xi’an, China’s urban development
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors look at how the Chinese government's recent national project, "the Belt and Road Initiatives" (the BRI), is played out at the local level in the context of cultural cities.
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How to construct a coordinated ecological network at different levels: A case from Ningbo city, China
TL;DR: Zhang et al. as mentioned in this paper explored the linkages between ecological source areas and corridors at various administrative levels, finally forming an EN that links multiple levels, which can accurately identify the spaces with critical ecological roles at different administrative levels and provide a reference for designing the whole ecological space.
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When in China, drink as the Chinese do: methodological considerations of alcohol consumption in research and fieldwork
Harng Luh Sin,Yang Yang +1 more
TL;DR: ‘Both of you have to start going over to toast the hosts to equalize the amount of drinking between the authors' side and theirs’
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Dance Machine: Performing the city in China’s public space
Tim Oakes,Yang Yang +1 more
- 01 Dec 2020
TL;DR: This paper explored China's "plaza dance craze" (guangchangwure) as a practice of "vernacular urban modernity" through which urban public space is claimed, produced, and experimented with by ordinary urban residents.
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