
Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Table of Contents
- Abbreviations
- Acknowledgements
- 1 Emerging Civic Urbanisms in Asia: An Introduction
- 2 Walking Tours and Community Heritage in Singapore: Civic Activism in the Making in Queenstown and Geylang
- 3 Resistance and Resilience: A Case Study of Rebuilding the Choi Yuen Village in Hong Kong
- 4 Urban Planning, Public Interest, and Spatial Justice: A Case Study of the Lo-Sheng Sanatorium Preservation Movement in Taipei
- 5 Placemaking as Social Learning: Taipei’s Open Green Programme as Pedagogical Civic Urbanism
- 6 Hong Kong’s Urban Renewal Fund: A Step towards Citizen-driven Placemaking?
- 7 Re-emerging Civic Urbanism: The Evolving State–Civil Society Relations in Community Building in Seoul
- 8 A Shifting Paradigm of Urban Regeneration in Seoul?: A Case Study of Citizen Participation in Haebangchon Urban Regeneration Project
- 9 Building Communities through Neighbourhood-based: Participatory Planning in Singapore
- 10 Beyond the Sunday Spectacle: Foreign Domestic Workers and Emergent Civic Urbanisms in Hong Kong
- 11 Holding Space, Making Place: Nurturing Emergent Solidarities within New Food Systems in Singapore
- 12 Conclusion: Civic Urbanisms and Urban Governance in Asia and Beyond
- Index
- Publications/Global Asia
11 - Holding Space, Making Place: Nurturing EmergentSolidarities within New Food Systems inSingapore
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 19 November 2022
- Frontmatter
- Table of Contents
- Abbreviations
- Acknowledgements
- 1 Emerging Civic Urbanisms in Asia: An Introduction
- 2 Walking Tours and Community Heritage in Singapore: Civic Activism in the Making in Queenstown and Geylang
- 3 Resistance and Resilience: A Case Study of Rebuilding the Choi Yuen Village in Hong Kong
- 4 Urban Planning, Public Interest, and Spatial Justice: A Case Study of the Lo-Sheng Sanatorium Preservation Movement in Taipei
- 5 Placemaking as Social Learning: Taipei’s Open Green Programme as Pedagogical Civic Urbanism
- 6 Hong Kong’s Urban Renewal Fund: A Step towards Citizen-driven Placemaking?
- 7 Re-emerging Civic Urbanism: The Evolving State–Civil Society Relations in Community Building in Seoul
- 8 A Shifting Paradigm of Urban Regeneration in Seoul?: A Case Study of Citizen Participation in Haebangchon Urban Regeneration Project
- 9 Building Communities through Neighbourhood-based: Participatory Planning in Singapore
- 10 Beyond the Sunday Spectacle: Foreign Domestic Workers and Emergent Civic Urbanisms in Hong Kong
- 11 Holding Space, Making Place: Nurturing Emergent Solidarities within New Food Systems in Singapore
- 12 Conclusion: Civic Urbanisms and Urban Governance in Asia and Beyond
- Index
- Publications/Global Asia
Summary
Abstract
Today, cities depend on global food systems thatprioritize urban needs over that of other regions.These food systems are part of a model of urbanismthat works towards increasing disconnection in thefood ecosystem – ecologically andsociopolitically. By discussing our variedexperiences with a community food initiative inSingapore, Foodscape Collective, we reflect on thecollaborative aspect of making, and finding, ourplace – viewing placemaking as a process of civicsense-making and identity-formation. Through acollaboratively written set of perspectives, wesuggest how civic urbanism through dialogicalplacemaking renews our relationships with food andagriculture, by weaving together imaginaries of amore inclusive and circular food system.
Keywords: Place-making,prefiguration, network, community, foodsystems
Introduction
Food has figured in Singapore's post-war, postcolonialindependence as a cultural anchor in times ofdisorientation. It has been part of thetransformation of relationships between people,physical spaces, and with people's relationshipswith food itself – as both commodity and wholefood.In this chapter, we look at the act of producingfood in Singapore as a political act of civicurbanism. We argue that discussions about foodpractices are not only cultural or historical, butpolitical in the context of neoliberalized economiessuch as Singapore: encouraging individual andcollective actions that prefigure a more dynamicculture of civic urbanism.
Through this, we respond to Cho, Križnik, and Hou's(this volume) provocation for more discussions onthe role of citizens and civil society, given theirdiscursive absence in studies of developmentalstates within the neoliberal restructuring ofstate–market relations. While Singapore's centralplanning incorporates new ideas rapidly, this ispremised on the continual repositioning of the stateas provisioner of imaginaries, socialities, andpossibility. We argue, alongside other chapters inthis book, that an overt focus on the state's rolerenders people's work of imagining other forms ofcitizenship invisible. This chapter focuses onalternative practices of building collectivity:building the independence and capacity for people tocontest undesirable futures emerging fromcentralized food production networks, while buildingcollective capacity to surpass the individualizingframe of neoliberal self-help.
To reflect how plural perspectives and actions mayshape the way a network's work emerges, we havechosen to write as a group.
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- Information
- Emerging Civic Urbanisms in AsiaHong Kong, Seoul, Singapore, and Taipei beyondDevelopmental Urbanization, pp. 267 - 294Publisher: Amsterdam University PressPrint publication year: 2022