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.)
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