JS-26.8
Housing Low-Income People in Globalizing Taipei

Tuesday, July 15, 2014: 3:30 PM
Room: 315
Oral Presentation
Yi-Ling CHEN , Global and Area Studies/ Geography, University of Wyoming, Laramie, WY
The idea of “becoming a global city” has strongly influenced the urban policies in Taipei, since the 1990s. The Taipei City Government has implemented several mega projects in the city; claiming to improveTaipei’s global status, such as building the highest building in the world and creating a new financial district. Meanwhile, the squatters that used to be a part of Taipei’s landscape after 1949, have rapidly disappeared and our displaced by luxury buildings and parks. Globalizing Taipei becomes the fertile ground of housing speculation and leads to serious problems of housing affordability. Recently, the post-2005 housing boom has triggered a strong social rental housing movement. This paper will firstly examine how “global city discourse” has influenced  the urban projects in Taipei, since the 1990s. Then, it will explore the status of low-income housing in Taipei’s urban policies. This paper will draw on several theoretical concepts, including the right to the city, neoliberalization in East Asian cities, and worlding cities, to discuss the problem of low-income housing in globalizing Taipei.