Spatial Narration of Public Service:Order Reconstruction of Relocated Communities for Poverty Alleviation in Tibet
As a practice of poverty alleviation under spatial reconfiguration,relocation for poverty alleviation is a creative initiative that exchanges space for development.The relocated population for poverty alleviation has undergone significant changes in their way of life,production methods,and social relationships,as they have shifted from scattered settlements in agricultural and pastoral villages to gathering and living in modern communities for poverty alleviation and relocation.Additionally,the public services provided by the relocated communities have shown certain"spatial isolation".Based on the field survey of the relocated S community for poverty alleviation in Tibet,the social space theory is used to analyze the production space,living space and psychological space of the relocated group for poverty alleviation from the perspective of ternary dialectics of"spatial representation-spatial practice-representational space",and finds that the relocated S community for poverty alleviation is in the"threshold"stage of transition,and is characterized by the compression and differentiation of the living space,the transformation of the livelihood of the production space and the renewal and reorganization of the relationship space.Reorganize and interpret the government's spatial planning and the use of space by the relocated population through institutionalized means,such as increasing the interaction between the government and the community,exploring complementary ways between the government and the market,implementing mutual assistance and cooperation between the community and the market,etc.,in order to reconstruct the order of the relocated S community for poverty alleviation and provide accessible public services for the relocated population.
Relocation for poverty alleviationThe social space theoryOrder reconstructionPublic serviceSocial integration