如何拯救唐人街:通过民族零售保持可负担性和社区服务

C. Chan, A. Zhou
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引用次数: 0

摘要

北美唐人街受到新冠肺炎的打击尤其严重,全球疫情加剧了反亚裔种族主义和仇外情绪的现实。导致唐人街企业倒闭、商业空置和士绅化增加的因素在疫情之前就已经存在,而且只会加剧。为了保护唐人街,市政当局制定了历史保护和小企业支持措施,如历史指定、企业技术援助、加强许可审查和遗留商业计划。本研究调查了新冠肺炎大流行前后温哥华、旧金山和洛杉矶三个唐人街零售变化的差异。同时,本研究还考察了保留传统商业计划和其他保护措施对零售业的影响。对市政府官员、组织者、社区机构和商界成员进行了采访,并对现有的地方计划、政策和报告进行了分析。这项研究发现,通过历史保护、小企业支持和疫情救济采取的措施并没有显著解决唐人街社区的核心需求。最有效的救济和保护形式是经济适用房、商业企业的社区所有权和商业租金的直接援助。这项研究还承认,由于华人社区有能力反对城市更新、贫民窟清理和高速公路建设等历史歧视性规划做法,一些唐人街的情况比其他唐人街要好。这些历史的影响与每个独特唐人街内少数民族零售业的生存能力紧密交织在一起,取决于现有社区关系的强度,这些关系将决定如何制定保护政策。
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How to Save Chinatown: Preserving affordability and community service through ethnic retail
Chinatowns in North America have been especially hit hard by COVID-19, a reality of anti-Asian racist and xenophobic sentiment exacerbated by the global pandemic. The factors contributing to increased business closures, commercial vacancy, and gentrification in Chinatowns have existed before the pandemic and have only been exacerbated. In order to preserve Chinatowns, municipalities have enacted historic preservation and small business support measures, such as historic designations, technical assistance for businesses, increased permit scrutiny, and legacy business programs. This study investigates the difference in retail changes across three Chinatowns in Vancouver, San Francisco and Los Angeles both prior and during the COVID-19 pandemic. Concurrently, this study also examines the impact of retaining a legacy business program and other preservation measures on the retail landscape. Interviews with city officials, organizers, community institutions, and members of the business community were conducted along with an analysis of existing local programs, policies and reports. This study finds that measures taken through historic preservation, small business support, and pandemic relief have not significantly addressed core needs within Chinatown communities. The most effective forms of relief and preservation was affordable housing, community-ownership of commercial businesses, and direct assistance for commercial rent. This study also acknowledges that some Chinatowns are faring better than others due to the ability of the Chinese community to fight against to historic discriminatory planning practices such as urban renewal, slum clearance, and highway building. The impact of these histories is deeply intertwined with the survivability of ethnic retail within each distinct Chinatown, and depending on the strength of existing community ties that remain will inform how preservation policies should be enacted.
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来源期刊
Berkeley Planning Journal
Berkeley Planning Journal Social Sciences-Geography, Planning and Development
CiteScore
1.40
自引率
0.00%
发文量
5
期刊介绍: The Berkeley Planning Journal is an annual peer-reviewed journal, published by graduate students in the Department of City and Regional Planning (DCRP) at the University of California, Berkeley since 1985.
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