Faculty Member
Prof. CHUNG King Lam, Calvin
Assistant Professor
BSSc (CUHK)
MPhil (CUHK)
PhD (UCL)
FRGS
FRSA
AFHEA
(852) 3943-9791
calvin.chung@cuhk.edu.hkRESEARCH PROJECTS
As principal investigator
More data, better governance? The central-local politics of environmental data in China. Early Career Scheme, Research Grants Council, Hong Kong. (2021–23, HK$891,700)
Financing urban green projects in China: An urban political ecology perspective. Direct Grant, Faculty of Social Science, CUHK. (2022–23, HK$100,000)
Internationalisation at home through introducing virtual field trips to geography teaching and learning. Grant Scheme for Internationalization of Curriculum, Teaching Development and Language Enhancement Grant, CUHK. (2021–22, HK$85,650).
Health by design in contest: The planning politics of healthy city in China. Direct Grant, Faculty of Social Science, CUHK. (2020–22, HK$99,377)
The greening of urban governance in China: A case study of greenway development in the Pearl River Delta cities. Hong Kong Research Grant 2016, Royal Geographical Society (with IBG). (2016–17, £2,500)
As co-investigator
Towards net zero and sustainable cities with resource optimisation, circular economy and research network (NZS CITIES). Worldwide Universities Network (WUN) Research Development Fund (RDF). (2023-24, £10,000)
Big data for big land grab? A discursive–material nexus analysis of big data-themed land development in China’s inland Data Valley’. General Research Fund, Research Grants Council, Hong Kong. (2022–24, HK$916,896)
The role of neighbourhood governance in cities in China and the UK amidst the COVID-19 pandemic. National Social Science Fund of China. (2021–24, CNY200,000)
How can the dragon soar? An interdisciplinary approach to China’s post-reform dialectics of state, market and space. Research Sustainability of Major RGC Funding Schemes, CUHK. (2019–22, HK$680,000)
SELECTED PUBLICATIONS
(* for corresponding author)
Teo, S. S. K., Chung, C. K. L.*, & Wang, Z. (forthcoming). Theorising with urban China: methodological and tactical experiments for a more global urban studies. Dialogues in Human Geography. [Free access to full paper]
Wang, K., Chung, C. K. L., Xu, J.*, & Cheung, A. C. K. (forthcoming). Can the locked-in be unlocked? University stratification in China under state-led quest for world-class university. Higher Education Policy. [Free access to full paper]
Xu, J., Li, A.*, Chung, C. K. L., & Yue, Y. (forthcoming). Mapping the unmapped: Investigating big data companies via online sources. The Professional Geographer.
Day, T.*, Chung, C. K. L., Doolittle, W. E., Housel, J., & McDaniel, P. N. (2023). Beyond COVID chaos: What postsecondary educators learned from the online pivot. The Professional Geographer, 75(1), 14-30. [Free access to full paper] [Digest on The Conversation]
Xu, J., Chung, C. K. L.*, Yang, H., & Guan, H. (2022). New sectors, new spaces, and China’s evolving state–firm relations. The China Review, 22(4), 1-18. [Free access to full paper]
Xu, J., Zou, G.*, & Chung, C. K. L. (2022). (Re)shaping urban governance through state-business interaction in inland China’s emerging industries. The China Review, 22(4), 77-104. [Free access to full paper]
Zheng, S., Qin, X., Chung, C. K. L., Pan, M., & Li, X.* (2022). State–firm relations in knowledge sourcing for regional innovation: The rise of the robotics industry in Dongguan, China. The China Review, 22(4), 19-44. [Free access to full paper]
Chung, C. K. L.*, & Xu, J. (2021). Scalar politics of urban sustainability: Governing the Chinese city in the era of ecological civilisation. Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers, 46(3), 689–703. [Free access to full paper]
Zhang, F., Chung, C. K. L.*, Lu, T., & Wu, F. (2021). The role of the local government in China’s urban sustainability transition: A case study of Wuxi’s solar development. Cities, 117, 103294. [Link to full paper]
Xu, J.*, Chung, C. K. L., & Zhang, M. (2021). Governing mega-city regions in China: One region, many systems. In A. G. O. Yeh, G. S. C. Lin, & F. F. Yang (Eds.), Mega-city region development in China (pp. 226–247). Routledge.
Day, T.*, Chang, I.-C. C., Chung, C. K. L., Doolittle, W. E., Housel, J., & McDaniel, P. N. (2021). The immediate impact of COVID-19 on postsecondary teaching and learning. The Professional Geographer, 73, 1–13. [Free access to full paper]
Chung, C. K. L.*, Xu, J.*, & Zhang, M.* (2020). Geographies of Covid-19: How space and virus shape each other. Asian Geographer, 37(2), 99–116. [Free access to full paper]
Shao, Z.*, Xu, J., Chung, C. K. L., Spit, T., & Wu, Q. (2020). State as both the regulator and the player: The politics of transfer of development rights in China. International Journal of Urban and Regional Research, 44(1), 38–54. [Free access to full paper] (Top Cited Article of the journal, 2020-21)
Zhang, F.*, Chung, C. K. L., & Yin, Z. (2020). Green infrastructure for China’s new urbanisation: A case study of greenway development in Maanshan. Urban Studies, 57(3), 508–524. [Free access to full paper]
Zhang, M., Xu, J., & Chung, C. K. L.* (2020). Scalar politics and uneven accessibility to intercity railway in the Pearl River Delta, China. Annals of the American Association of Geographers, 110(4), 1260–1277. [Free access to full paper]
Zhang, M.*, Xu, J., & Chung, C. K. L. (2020). Politics of scale, bargaining power and its spatial impact: Planning for intercity railway in the Pearl River Delta. The China Quarterly, 243, 676–700.
Chung, C. K. L.*, Zhang, F., & Wu, F. (2018). Negotiating green space with landed interests: The urban political ecology of greenway in the Pearl River Delta, China. Antipode, 50(4), 891–909. [Link to full paper]
He, S., Chung, C. K. L., Bayrak, M. M., & Wang, W.* (2018). Administrative boundary changes and regional inequality in provincial China. Applied Spatial Analysis and Policy, 11(1), 103–120.
Chung, C. K. L.*, & Xu, J. (2016). Scale as both material and discursive: A view through China’s rescaling of urban planning system for environmental governance. Environment and Planning C: Government and Policy, 34(8), 1404–1424.
Chung, C. K. L.* (2015). Upscaling in progress: The reinvention of urban planning as an apparatus of environmental governance in China. In T. C. Wong, S. S. Han, & H. Zhang (Eds.), Population mobility, urban planning and management in China (pp. 171–187). Cham, Switzerland: Springer.
Wang, L.*, Shen, J., & Chung, C. K. L. (2015). City profile: Suzhou – A Chinese city under transformation. Cities, 44, 60–72.
Xu, J.*, & Chung, C. K. L. (2014). ‘Environment’ as an evolving concept in China’s urban planning system. International Development Planning Review, 36(4), 391–412. (Awarded the journal’s best paper in 2014)
Lam, K. C.*, Ma, W., Chan, P. K., Hui, W. C., Chung, K. L., Chung, Y. T. T., Wong, C. Y., & Lin, H. (2013). Relationship between road traffic noisescape and urban form in Hong Kong. Environmental Monitoring and Assessment, 185(12), 9683–9685.
Teaching Fields
- Theories of global political economy (GPEC5801)
- Environmental politics and sustainability (GRMD1402, GPEC5817)
- Smart city policies and governance (GRMD4503)
Research interests
- Geographies of state restructuring
- Politics and practice of spatial planning
- Political ecology and environmental policy
Services/ Posts
GRM
- Board Secretary (08/2021 to present)
- Seminar Coordinator (08/2020 to 07/2022)
- Member, Research Committee (08/2021 to present)
- Member, Staff-Student Consultative Committee (08/2020 to present)
Faculty/College
- Member, Campus Planning Committee, United College (06/2022 to present)
- Member, MSSc in Global Political Economy Programme Committee, Faculty of Social Science (08/2019 to present)
External
- Events and Conference Officer, Urban Geography Research Group, Royal Geographical Society (with IBG) (10/2022 to present)
- Board Member, Asian Geography Specialty Group, American Assoication of Geographers (10/2021 to present)
- Associate Editor, Asian Geographer (11/2020 to present)
SUGGESTED RESEARCH TOPICS FOR POSTGRADUATE STUDENTS
Politics of urbanisation
The study of how the planning and development of cities are shaped by a constellation of actors, institutions and discourses at and across different sites and scales; those with a focus on the themes of urban infrastructure, data-driven governance, and healthy city planning are particularly welcomed
Political ecology and environmental governance
The study of how environmental changes at various sites and scales both shape and are shaped by political, economic, social and cultural conditions; those attempting to combine qualitative and quantitative approaches for their research are particularly welcomed