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Li Xiang
Publish Date:2021/01/18 Views:


Name: Li Xiang                   Gender: Male

Degree: Ph.D.

Title: Assistant professor

Research Interest: Urban Redevelopment, Urban Governance, Institution and Urban Policy

Courses Taught: Urban Sociology; Fundamentals of Design

Office: Haiyang Building, 416

Email: lxplanning@xmu.edu.cn

Education Background:

20152020  University of Melbourne  PhD in Urban Planning

20122015   Peking University  Master’s in Urban and Regional Planning

20072012  Central South University   Bachelor’s in Urban Planning

Honors and Awards:

Melbourne International Engagement Award, University of

Melbourne, 2015 to 2020.

Dean’s Prize for Published Postgraduate Research, University of Melbourne, May 2019.

Research Grants:

Chief Investigator: Peking University-Lincoln Center Research Fund 2020-2021 for project titled‘State-led or Market-led? Institutional efficiency of dilapidated residential redevelopment: a transaction cost approach’, 2020-09.

Research Collaborator: National Social Science Fund (20BJL108)


Representative publications:

Xiang Li. (2021). Market-oriented Redevelopment Mechanism Towards a More Just City in China? Made in China Journal. (Forthcoming)

Xiang Li, Sun Sheng Han. (2021). Neoliberalization in Urban Governance at the Real Estate Turn in China. In: Piyush Tiwari and Julie Miao (eds). A Research Agenda for Real Estate. Edward Elgar. (Forthcoming)

Xiang Li, Sun Sheng Han, Hao Wu. (2019). Urban Consolidation, Power Relations, and Dilapidated Residential Redevelopment in Mutoulong, Shenzhen, China. Urban Studies. (SSCI, Q1, IF: 3.272)

Xiang Li, Hao Wu, Sun Sheng Han. (2019). Institutional Analysis of Market-led Residential Development in Shenzhen: A Transaction cost perspective. In Proceedings of the Twenty Fifth Annual Pacific-rim Real Estate Society Conference.

Sintusingha Sidh, Hao Wu, Xiang Li. (2017). Urban Livability in Melbourne. Shanghai Urban Planning.

Xiang Li, Keshi Chen, Xin Guo. (2015). A comparison of the strategies of coping with shrinkage in the USA and Germany: under the background of transformation of growth orientation values. Urban Planning International. 2,81-86.


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