Thursday, 30 April 2026

A note of theory-decomposing on Liberating Systems Theory

 A note of theory-decomposing on Liberating Systems Theory

 

Highlight 8 main ideas of R.L. Flood's book of Liberating Systems Theory, and describe 2 main claims of it in terms of Toulmin's model of arguments.

R. L. Flood’s Liberating Systems Theory argues that systems theory should be read critically and pluralistically, not as a single universal framework, and that its value lies in exposing the limits, legitimacies, and purposes of different systems perspectives. In Toulmin terms, the book’s main claims are best read as epistemological arguments: it offers claims about how systems theory should be understood, supported by grounds drawn from history, philosophy, and critiques of universals.

Eight main ideas

1.    Systems theory is not one unified doctrine but a field of different rationalities and viewpoints.

2.    Any serious systems theory must be critical, meaning it should question its own assumptions rather than treat them as universal truths.

3.    The book distinguishes between “Liberating Systems Theory” as a general conception and two specific strands: liberation of systems theory, and systems theory for liberation.

4.    The work rejects conceptual reflexivity that pretends there is one naturally correct, totalizing system of knowledge.

5.    “System” means different things under different paradigms, so systems concepts should be interpreted contextually rather than treated as fixed.

6.    The history of systems thinking matters, because its development shows breaks, discontinuities, and competing traditions rather than smooth cumulative progress.

7.    Inquiry and problem solving are not neutral techniques; they are shaped by legitimacies, limitations, and underlying knowledge interests.

8.    The book’s broader aim is emancipatory: to help people liberate knowledge from hidden domination while also critiquing claims to universality.

Toulmin claim 1

Claim: Systems theory should be treated as plural, critical, and non-universal rather than as a single objective system of truth.
Grounds: Flood presents the diversity of systems traditions, the three rationalities, and the need to recognize different legitimacies and limitations across approaches.
Warrant: If competing rationalities genuinely exist, then no single systems framework can legitimately claim universal authority over all others.
Backing: The book’s sustained critique of universals and its use of interpretive analytics and knowledge-constitutive interests support that warrant.

Toulmin claim 2

Claim: Systems inquiry should be used for liberation as well as analysis, meaning it ought to reveal power, ideology, and constraint rather than merely solve technical problems.
Grounds: Flood ties systems inquiry to critique, emancipation, and the exposure of hidden assumptions in problem solving and knowledge production.
Warrant: If inquiry shapes what can be known and done, then inquiry must be evaluated for whether it reproduces domination or enables emancipation.
Backing: The book explicitly frames its argument as a critical theory of systems thinking and connects it with Foucault and Habermas.

In plain terms

A simple way to read Flood’s argument is this: systems thinking is most useful when it admits that different methods fit different purposes, and when it asks who benefits from a given way of defining a “system”. That is why the book is both methodological and political in orientation.

A collection of notes on theory/ concept-decomposing: for Housing Studies students

A collection of notes on theory/ concept-decomposing: for Housing Studies students


1. On the housing deficit theory

2. On the spatiotemporal fix theory

3. On the "right to the city"

A note of concept-decomposing on “the right to the city”: for Housing Studies students

A note of concept-decomposing on “the right to the city”: for Housing Studies students

 

Highlight 4 main ideas of David Harvey's thinking of "the right of to the city" and describe 2 claims of it in terms of Toulmin's model of arguments.

David Harvey’s “right to the city” is a radical, anti‑capitalist re‑reading of Henri Lefebvre’s original slogan, turning it into a collective claim over how cities are produced and governed. Below are four of its main ideas, followed by two claims analysed through Toulmin’s model of argument.


Four main ideas in Harvey’s “right to the city”

1.    Collective and transformative right
For Harvey, the right to the city is not just individual access to services or spaces, but a collective right to change ourselves by changing the city and to reshape the processes of urbanization. This emphasizes permanent transformation, not static entitlements.

2.    Anti‑capitalist critique of urbanization
Harvey argues that capitalist urbanization treats the city as a “fix” for surplus capital, leading to speculative booms, “creative destruction,” and displacement of marginalized groups. The right to the city is therefore a claim against capital’s domination over urban space and surplus.

3.    Democratic control over the urban surplus
He insists that the huge wealth generated by urbanization (e.g., land‑value increases, rents, finance‑driven projects) should be under social and democratic control, not private profit. This surplus should be redirected to housing, infrastructure, and public services for all.

4.    Urban social movements as political agents
Harvey sees grassroots movements (squatters, tenants, environmentalists, workers) as key agents who can “re‑enchant” the city and democratize decision‑making. Through such struggles, the “right to the city” becomes a practical, not just theoretical, political project.


Two claims analysed via Toulmin’s model

Toulmin’s model has six elements: claim (C), data (D), warrant (W), backing (B), qualifier, and rebuttal. Here are two Harvey‑style claims laid out in that form.

Claim 1

C: Urban residents have a collective right to reshape the processes of urbanization.

·        D: Cities under capitalist regimes repeatedly demolish and redevelop neighborhoods to absorb surplus capital, displacing poor and working‑class communities.

·        W: If a social process (urbanization) systematically produces and redistributes value that affects everyone, then those affected must have a say in its direction.

·        B: Harvey’s Marxist‑Marxist–Lefebvrian framework shows that urban space is produced by labor and social relations, not just market forces.

·        Qualifier: Harvey states this as a normative and revolutionary right, not yet fully realized in law.

·        Rebuttal: Some commentators argue that conflating “right to the city” with anti‑capitalist revolution may limit practical policy use.

Claim 2

C: The urban surplus should be socially controlled, not privately captured.

·        D: Recent urban mega‑projects (e.g., large‑scale redevelopments and finance‑driven real‑estate booms) concentrate wealth in the hands of developers and financial institutions while worsening inequality and displacement.

·        W: Where collective social activity produces value (e.g., in dense, networked cities), the benefits should be subject to collective decision‑making rather than private appropriation.

·        B: Harvey’s analysis of Marxian “surplus absorption” and rent‑generation in cities supports treating the urban surplus as a common, not purely private, asset.

·        Qualifier: Harvey admits that this is a political project requiring social movements and institutional change, not an automatic legal outcome.

·        Rebuttal: Proponents of market‑based urbanism argue that private investment is necessary to finance infrastructure and that social control may reduce efficiency.

 

Try to illustrate the ideas a bit more in the context of the contemporary history of the Hong Kong urban redevelopment efforts.

Harvey’s “right to the city” can be sharply illustrated in Hong Kong by looking at how large‑scale urban‑redevelopment machinery has reallocated space, value, and power over the past two decades. Below I connect his four main ideas to key features of Hong Kong’s redevelopment history, then briefly show how two of his claims manifest in local debates.


1. Collective and transformative right to reshape the city

In Hong Kong, the Urban Renewal Authority (URA) and the Land (Compulsory Sale for Redevelopment) Ordinance have enabled the clearance of older, low‑rise neighborhoods (e.g., Kowloon Walled City fringes, parts of Wan Chai, Sham Shui Po) to make room for high‑rise, high‑value projects. These schemes are often justified as “renewal for the public interest,” yet they are planned and executed by state–corporate coalitions with limited meaningful input from residents, shopkeepers, and tenants.

From Harvey’s perspective, the “right to the city” would mean that affected communities should have the collective power to shape redevelopment visions—such as preserving community networks, affordable housing, and mixed‑use streets—rather than being treated merely as obstacles to be relocated or compensated. Hong Kong’s tightly controlled planning system and weak channels for genuine community co‑design show how this transformative right is largely absent in practice.


2. Anti‑capitalist critique: city as a fix for surplus

Harvey argues that capitalist urbanization converts cities into “fixes” for surplus capital, leading to speculative property booms and enclave‑style luxury developments. In Hong Kong, this appears in the way clearance of “blighted” low‑rise areas has unlocked land for premium‑priced, often high‑end private towers and mixed‑use complexes (e.g., large‑scale redevelopments near MTR stations and waterfronts).

These projects often prioritize commercial and financial returns over social goals, even though the state formally claims to pursue “balanced” development. From a Harvey‑style view, such redevelopment is less about “improving” the city for all citizens than about finding profitable outlets for capital—turning compact, socially dense neighborhoods into real‑estate assets that deepen inequality and spatial polarization (e.g., luxury enclaves adjacent to subdivided flats and remote public housing).


3. Democratic control over the urban surplus

Harvey insists that the huge value generated by urbanization—land‑value increments, developer profits, and speculative gains—should be socially controlled and redirected toward housing, infrastructure, and public services. In Hong Kong, much of this surplus is privately captured through land auctions, redevelopment profits, and property‑market booms, while the public mostly bears the costs of displacement, congestion, and rising rents.

For example, compulsory‑sale schemes and URA projects have been criticized for exploiting “development potential” and generating little net social benefit for neighboring areas, even though they displace long‑standing residents and micro‑businesses. Harvey would argue that a genuine “right to the city” would require mechanisms—such as community land trusts, social‑housing components, or rent‑stabilization tied to redevelopment—so that the urban surplus is not just a windfall for private capital but a resource for collective well‑being.


4. Urban social movements as political agents

Harvey sees grassroots movements as crucial to “re‑enchanting” the city and contesting top‑down, capital‑driven planning. In Hong Kong, redevelopment controversies have repeatedly sparked local protests, heritage campaigns, and tenant‑rights mobilizations, such as campaigns around Mong Kok, Kowloon City, and the Former Kowloon–Canton Railway Police Married Quarters.

These movements often demand that the state reconsider demolition plans, conserve historical streetscapes, and include more affordable housing and community facilities in new developments. For Harvey, such actions exemplify the “right to the city” in practice: attempts to reclaim democratic voice over how and for whom the city is remade, rather than accepting redevelopment as a technocratic or purely economic necessity.


Two Harvey‑style claims in Hong Kong terms (Toulmin‑style)

Claim 1: Residents have a collective right to shape redevelopment

·        Claim: Hong Kong’s residents should have a collective right to co‑design how urban redevelopment affects their neighborhoods.

·        Data: Large‑scale clearance projects frequently bulldoze social networks, small businesses, and affordable housing without meaningful consultation, privileging developer‑driven masterplans.

·        Warrant: Where redevelopment dramatically alters everyday life, social relations, and property values, those affected must be treated as full political agents, not merely as claimants for compensation.

·        Backing: Harvey’s argument that “the right to the city” is a collective right to change ourselves by changing the city applies precisely to dense, socially embedded neighborhoods such as those cleared under URA and compulsory‑sale schemes.

·        Qualifier: Harvey would likely see this as a radical demand, going beyond current Hong Kong planning norms, which are still dominated by pro‑development, expert‑led planning.

Claim 2: The post‑redevelopment urban surplus should be socially controlled

·        Claim: The huge value created by Hong Kong’s redevelopment should be under social and democratic control, not just private profit.

·        Data: Land‑value uplifts and redevelopment profits in Hong Kong accrue mainly to developers and landowners, while displaced residents and tenants face higher rents and distant, fragmented living conditions.

·        Warrant: When social activity (density, infrastructure, public investment) generates surplus value, the beneficiaries should be subject to collective claim and redistribution, rather than being treated as private windfalls.

·        Backing: Harvey’s analysis of cities as “fixes” for surplus capital matches the Hong Kong pattern where redevelopment unlocks land for high‑end, speculative projects instead of broadly shared housing and public goods.

·        Qualifier: In Hong Kong political reality, this is more a political project than a legal right, because existing land‑ and planning regimes are deeply embedded in property‑rights and market‑oriented frameworks.

 

References

Harvey, D. (2008) ‘The right to the city’, New Left Review, 53, pp. 23–40.

(This is Harvey’s key essay elaborating his reinterpretation of Lefebvre’s concept and is widely cited in urban‑justice and urban‑redevelopment debates.)

Liu, X. and Yu, C. (2022) ‘Right to the city and community facility planning for elderly: The case of urban renewal district in Hong Kong’, Land Use Policy, 114, 105991.

(This article explicitly applies the “right to the city” to Hong Kong urban renewal, focusing on access to community facilities and the elderly’s spatial rights.)



 

** theory-decomposing is a literature review technique.



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        A collection of blog notes on using chatgpt for research purpose.

A note of theory-decomposing on Harvey's spatiotemporal fix theory: for Housing Studies students

A note of theory-decomposing on Harvey's spatiotemporal fix theory: for Housing Studies students

 

Highlight 4 main ideas of David Harvey's Spatiotemporal Fix Theory and describe 2 claims of it in terms of Toulmin's model of arguments.

David Harvey’s spatiotemporal fix can be understood through four main ideas: capitalism’s crises are driven by surplus capital and surplus labor; these surpluses are temporarily absorbed by moving investment across space; crises are also delayed by stretching time through credit, debt, and long-term commitments; and these “fixes” are only temporary, because they eventually create new contradictions and larger crises.

Four main ideas

·        Surplus absorption. The theory starts from the problem of overaccumulation: too much capital and too much labor cannot be profitably used in one place or at one time.

·        Spatial displacement. Capital seeks relief by shifting investment into new regions, infrastructure, or built environments, which relocates the crisis instead of removing it.

·        Temporal deferment. Capital also postpones crisis by using debt, long-term projects, and delayed returns, buying time before contradictions reappear.

·        Temporary and self-defeating solution. The fix is unstable: it resolves immediate pressure but later intensifies the very crisis tendencies it was meant to manage.

Two claims in Toulmin form

Claim 1: Capitalism can delay crisis by reorganizing space and time.

·        Claim: Spatiotemporal shifts allow capitalism to postpone crisis rather than eliminate it.

·        Grounds: Harvey links the concept to surplus capital and surplus labor that are redirected into new places and longer time horizons.

·        Warrant: If surplus cannot be absorbed profitably in the present location or moment, moving it elsewhere or into the future can temporarily restore accumulation.

·        Backing: Harvey’s broader argument about spatial fix and time-space compression supports this mechanism.

·        Qualifier: This works only temporarily.

Claim 2: Every fix creates new contradictions.

·        Claim: Spatiotemporal fixes eventually deepen capitalism’s instability.

·        Grounds: The literature on Harvey’s theory says each fix defers crisis but then intensifies crisis tendencies and their effects.

·        Warrant: A solution that depends on new investment, new geography, or more debt creates new vulnerabilities and limits for future accumulation.

·        Backing: Harvey’s Marxist framework treats capitalist crisis as recurrent and internally generated, not as a one-time problem.

·        Qualifier: The intensification is expected over time, not necessarily immediately.

Academic phrasing

A concise way to write this in an MBA or social science assignment is:

“Harvey’s spatiotemporal fix explains how capitalism manages crisis by shifting accumulation across space and deferring it across time, but these moves only postpone contradiction and eventually reproduce deeper instability”.

 

Try to illustrate the ideas a bit more in the context of the contemporary history of the Hong Kong housing market.

Hong Kong's housing market crisis offers a clear lens for Harvey's spatiotemporal fix theory, where land scarcity and capital overaccumulation drive temporary resolutions through spatial expansion and temporal deferral. These fixes absorb surplus capital into real estate but exacerbate affordability issues over time.

Surplus Absorption in HK Housing

Capital overaccumulation in Hong Kong funnels surplus into property development, with private housing prices rising for 27 months amid population growth and land limits. Public housing wait times exceed five years as low-income groups compete for scarce units, locking capital in high-rises and infrastructure.

Spatial Displacement

Post-1997 Asian Financial Crisis and 2008 Global Crisis, developers pursued spatial fixes via land reclamation (e.g., Lantau Tomorrow) and New Territories expansion, displacing surplus capital outward. Kowloon public estates cluster in Wong Tai Sin and Kwun Tong, using "residual" lower-rent sites for mass housing, but this spreads crisis to suburbs.

Temporal Deferment

Credit and long-term projects like MTR-linked developments and subsidized Home Ownership Scheme defer crisis by stretching turnover times. Government land sales and REITs (e.g., Link REIT) financialize housing, validating investments through future rents despite inelastic supply.

Temporary Fixes

These measures intensify contradictions: reclamation harms ecosystems, suburban builds increase commutes, and prices remain unaffordable (elasticity ~0.009). Urban renewal in Kowloon pushes more public housing into decaying areas, risking poverty concentration without resolving core overaccumulation.

 

Primary References

·        Harvey, D., 2001. Spaces of capital: towards a critical geography. Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press.

·        Jessop, B., 2006. Spatial fixes, temporal fixes and spatio-temporal fixes. In: David Harvey: a critical reader. Oxford: Blackwell, pp. 142-166.



** theory-decomposing is a literature review technique.



            e-resource support: https://www.perplexity.ai/


            

        A collection of blog notes on using chatgpt for research purpose.