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RESEARCH ARTICLE: Preparing for China's “Urban Billion”—Policy Implications and Potential for International Cooperation

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  27 September 2013

Wei Shen*
Affiliation:
Associate Dean for China & Jean Monnet Chair in EU-China Relations, ESSCA School of Management, LUNAM University, Angers, France.
*
Wei Shen, ESSCA School of Management, 1 rue Lakanal, Angers 49003, France; (phone) 33-6-41734709; (fax) 33-2-41734748; (e-mail) [email protected]
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Abstract

Though China's overall degree of urbanization is still below most Western countries, for instance when compared to Europe where over 70% of the total population lives in cities, the speed and magnitude of urbanization is truly mind-blowing. The challenges of China's unparalleled urbanization will not only impact on China's future growth but also have important implications for other nations. The European Union (EU) and its 27 member states have faced or continue to face some of the similar challenges of city management. The EU-China Partnership on Sustainable Urbanisation, launched at the EU-China summit on February 14, 2012, in Beijing, is a response to these pressing common challenges and offer new opportunities for expanding and reinforcing EU-China relations. This article puts China's urbanization process in a historical prospective and points to the country's massive current urban challenges and the way to deal with them as set out in the 12th Five Year Plan. It will illustrate how the EU and China can work together constructively in tackling the challenge of urbanization by helping to make Chinese cities greener and more sustainable, and by adding a fresh dynamic to EU-China economic and trade relations.

Environmental Practice 15:323–338 (2013)

Type
Features
Copyright
Copyright © National Association of Environmental Professionals 2013 

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