We are closing…

The Sustainable Localities Lab will close its doors at the end of 2023. Starting next year, Blaž will take up a new position at the University of Ljubljana, where he will lead a research on neighbourhood collective action, social innovation and resilient communities in East Asia and Europe. Hyunee will continue her work at KOICA.

지속가능한 지역사회 연구실은 2023년 말에 문을 닫을 예정입니다. 내년부터 Blaž는 류블랴나 대학교에서 새로운 직책을 맡아 동아시아 및 유럽의 지역 집단행동, 사회혁신, 회복력 있는 지역사회에 대한 연구를 주도할 예정입니다. 현이는 코이카에서 계속 근무할 예정입니다.

We would like to thank all our colleagues in Korea and abroad for their time, support and contribution to our lab. Special thanks to all our students at the Graduate School of Urban Studies, Hanyang University, who have been the main reason for running the Sustainable Localities Lab. Working together was a wonderful experience and inspiring time. 🥹

While we are sad to close the lab, we are also looking forward to new opportunities and ways of working together. And one day, we may be back!

Towards sustainable ODA

Hyunee has successfully presented and defended her Master’s thesis last Wednesday, Dec 6th, 2023. Congratulations! 🥳

Her study Towards Sustainable ODA: Research on Improving KOICA Construction Project Planning and Evaluation takes the planning and evaluation phase of KOICA (Korea International Cooperation Agency) construction projects as a case to analyse sustainability challenges and develop sustainability indicators that can improve and contribute to sustainable ODA. The research methodology includes a literature review and in-depth expert interviews that inform a three-round Delphi survey. The study findings indicate that KOICA construction projects face significant sustainability challenges related to low participation and readiness of recipient countries, inadequate survey, poor design, substandard construction, and issues with the KOICA’s institutional framework. Hyunee concludes that a list of comprehensive sustainability indicators can better inform the planning and evaluation phase of KOICA’s construction projects and contribute to the long-term sustainability of ODA.

Civic urbanisms and challenges to local communities

Institute for Spatial Policies from Ljubljana has published a review of our book Emerging Civic Urbanisms in Asia: Hong Kong, Seoul, Singapore, and Taipei beyond Developmental Urbanization. The short review argues that emerging civic urbanisms in Asia offer answers to the challenges to local communities and bear relevance for the public, planners and decision-makers beyond Asia.

류블라냐 공간정책연구소에서 책 ‘아시아의 떠오르는 시민 중심 도시론 : 발전주의 도시화 너머의 홍콩, 서울, 싱가포르 그리고 타이페이’에 대해 다음과 같이 평론함. 아시아의 시민 중심 도시론이 지역 사회가 마주한 어려움에 대해 해답을 제시하고, 공공, 계획가와 아시아 너머의 결정권자들 간의 관계 조성에 기여함을 잘 보여주는 책.

The review Emerging civic urbanisms in Asia as an answer to the challenges of local communities has been originally published in Slovene. English translation is attached bellow.


In 2017, our institute published a publication Policies of space: Challenges to local communities between Ljubljana and Seoul, where we presented and compared best practices of community building and local initiatives that we had encountered through our work. We argued that despite significant differences between both cities, local communities in Ljubljana and Seoul are facing similar challenges due to limited democratisation of decision–making in neighbourhoods.

The authors of the recently published book Emerging Civic Urbanisms in Asia: Hong Kong, Seoul, Singapore, and Taipei beyond Developmental Urbanization discuss similar topics and come to similar conclusions.

The edited volume compares eighteen cases of community building and local initiatives from social movements for the preservation of the Lo-Sheng Sanatorium in Taipei or Choi Yuen Village in Hong Kong to urban walks in Singaporean neighbourhoods of Queenstown and Geylang, and urban regeneration in To Kwa Wan in Hong Kong or Seowon Maeul, Samdeok Maeul as well as Haebangchon in Seoul. It compares self-organised local communities in Seoul’s Songhak Maeul and Seongmisan Maeul, the urban gardens of Singapore’s Foodscape Collective, the activism of female migrant workers in Hong Kong and collaboration of residents and municipalities in placemaking in Changwen and Gufeng neighbourhoods in Taipei, and Limbang, Tampines and Woodgrove neighbourhoods in Singapore.

Although the cases represent different forms of community building and local initiatives, which are strongly embedded in specific local and national contexts, they are also characterised by successful civic participation and collaboration between local communities and municipal or national governments.

Such collaboration is not always a given one. In Songhak Maeul, for instance, the relationship between the local community and municipal government evolved from conflict towards partnership as a result of successful anti-eviction and housing rights struggles, activism for self-organised producer and consumer cooperatives, and local initiatives for stronger neighbourhood autonomy. In many other cases collaboration between local communities, civil society and public administration was to an important extent an outcome of successful social mobilisation in neighbourhoods.

Such collaboration between local communities and municipal or national governments is what distinguishes emerging civic urbanisms in Asia from existing state-led or market-driven approaches. This makes emerging civic urbanisms a new spatial and symbolic expression of democratic decision-making in neighbourhoods.

Many contributing authors were actively involved in community building and local initiatives that are discussed in the book. They emphasise the practical importance of community building and local initiatives for strengthening civic participation, collaboration between the public, experts and decision-makers, as well as coalition building between residents, local communities, civil society and public administration. Thus, the authors focus on emerging civic urbanisms not only for their theoretical relevance to better understand the social, spatial and political change in Asia but also for practical value as successful cases of building more democratic, sustainable and resilient neighbourhoods and cities.

In this sense, the relevance of emerging civic urbanisms goes beyond Hong Kong, Seoul, Singapore or Taipei, since the cases bear relevance for the public, planners and decision-makers in Slovenia too. As best practices of community building and local initiatives, they offer possible answers to the challenges to local communities that were discussed in our publication Policies of space.

The book Emerging Civic Urbanisms in Asia: Hong Kong, Seoul, Singapore, and Taipei beyond Developmental Urbanization was edited by Im Sik Cho, Blaž Križnik and Jeffrey Ho and was published by the Amsterdam University Press in the Asian Cities series.

Neighbourhood community building and urban gardening in Haengchon Maeul (Photo: Blaž Križnik, 2019)

Marginal communities

Blaž will talk about marginal communities on the international seminar Offshore-Outskirt, On the Other Conviviality. The seminar will take place on Tuesday, April 25th, 2023 at the Research Center for Regional Planning and Urban Design, Seoul National University of Science and Technology.

His contribution Marginal communities: enclosures-to-be, liminalities or pure possibilities? draws on the author’s ongoing comparative study of neighbourhood communities in urban Asia. Their particular historical, socio-cultural, urban, and political contexts make generalisation across the cases and their comparison difficult. However, the study outcome shows that successful neighbourhood community building often builds on the shared experience of marginality.

The author proposes to approach marginal communities as enclosures-to-be, liminalities, and as pure possibilities to better understand the importance of neighbourhood community building for community empowerment and transformative social change. Such an approach may reveal the relevance of marginal communities, located on the urban “outskirts”, for building inclusive, resilient, and convivial “offshore” maritime communities of humans and non-humans, the major focus of this seminar.

Hangang fishermen as an “offshore” community on the “outskirts” of Seoul (Photo: Blaž Križnik, 2023)

Talking about community design…

Forum season is about to begin. This year, it seems to be all about community design.

Blaž will talk about civic urbanisms, community design and sustainable neighbourhoods and cities on the Jeju Universal Design Forum on Monday, November 14th, 2022 and Urban Design Forum in Seoul on Friday, December 16th, 2022. He will also join the International Forum of the Institute for Urban Humanities at the University of Seoul as discussant on Wednesday, November 16th, 2022.

블라쉬는 2022년 11월 14일 월요일 제주국제유니버설디자인엑스포과 2022년 12월 16일 금요일 서울에서 열리는 더나은도시디자인포럼에서 시민적 어바니즘, 지역 사회 디자인 및 지속 가능한 이웃과 도시에 대해 이야기 할 것이다. 2022년 11월 16일 수요일 서울대학교에서 열리는 도시인문학포럼-국제포럼에 토론자로 참여한다. 

Lots of talking to do… 😛