- Chinese version of concept
- Create content
- Funding and Participating Institutions and Organizations
- Hungry Urbanization: Eating Beijing
- image galleries
- Beijing, summer 2007, from a bicycle point of view
- Editing the OSM with Potlatch
- Frida's control panel
- Frida Illustration
- Frida tracks, OSM data, Beijing
- Frida V, Hou Hai lake in google earth
- Frida V., Beijing grid, google earth
- Frida V., hutong, google earth
- Frida V. bikes, google earth
- OpenStreetMap of Beijing - no. 1
- OpenStreetMap of Beijing - no. 2
- OpenStreetMap of Beijing - no. 3
- OrgNets + OpenStreetMap Presents: Beijing Bicycle Tour
- Interviews
- Transdisciplinary Research on Creative Industries in Beijing (CIB)
- Urban China Contents
- Beijing’s Art Districts: From Creative Hubs to Entertainment Centres
- Borderline Moving Images 2007
- Can You Manufacture a Creative Cluster?
- Constructing The Real (E)state of Chinese Contemporary Art: Reflections on 798, in 2004
- Creative China, Managerial Innovation, Global Brands: Interview with John Howkins
- Creative Clusters: Out of Nowhere?
- Creative Industries or Wasteful Ones?
- Creative Industries Timeline
- Creative Industries with Chinese Characteristics: An Interview with Professor Zhang Jingcheng
- Cultural Heritage Map of Beijing
- Detours and Developments in Beijing’s Music Scene
- Every Morning and One Day
- Frida V. in Beijing and OpenStreetMap's First Leaps in Beijing
- Holes in the Net? State Rescaling, Creative Control and the Dispersion of Power
- HomeShop Series Number One: Games 2008 Off the Map
- How Demographics and Scale Determine Business Models for Chinese Internet Companies
- How Foreign Architects became International Architects: A Case Study of China's Creative Construction Agenda
- Introduction: Counter-Mapping Creative Industries in Beijing
- Introduction: Counter-Mapping Creative Industries in Beijing
- Introduction to Section 1: Network Ecologies of Creative Waste
- Introduction to Section 2: Information Geographies vs. Creative Clusters
- Introduction to Section 3: Migrant Networks and Service Labour
- Introduction to Section 4: Centrality of Real-Estate Speculation for Creative Economies
- Introduction to Section 5: Import Cultures/Export Innovations in Architecture + Urban Design
- Introduction to Section 6: Artist Villages and Market Engineering
- Inverting the Cultural Map: Peripheral Geographies of Beijing’s Creative Production
- Is there Really Space for Creativity?
- Mapping Architectural Practice in Beijing
- Migrant Workers, Collaborative Research and Spatial Pressures: An Interview with Meng Yue
- Moving Towards a Creative Society
- Network Ecologies: Documenting Depletion, Exhausting Exposure
- Network of Contributors
- OrgNets + OpenStreetMap Presents: Beijing Bicycle Tour
- Other Kinds of Ambitions: From Artist Villages to Art Districts
- Prologue: Creative China (extract)
- Section 1: Network Ecologies of Creative Waste
- Section 2: Information Geographies vs. Creative Clusters
- Section 3: Migrant Networks and Service Labour
- Section 4: Centrality of Real-Estate Speculation for Creative Economies
- Section 5: Import Cultures / Export Innovations in Architecture and Urban Design
- Section 6: Artist Villages and Market Engineering
- Section 7: Policy
- Section 8: Creative Portraits
- The Art of Keys: Profit and Loss in the Art Village Industry
- The Uncertain Aesthetics of Contemporary Chinese Visual Culture
- Urban China - Counter-Mapping Creative Industries (Special Issue)
- Urban China - Cover
- Urban China no.33 ordering information
- Urban food production
- Recent posts
Section 1: Network Ecologies of Creative Waste
Submitted by admin on Sat, 17/01/2009 - 08:49.

Section Intro by Soenke Zehle
The notion of 'network ecologies' is introduced to explore ways in which debates on creativity and the economy of culture resonate and connect with ecopolitical concerns, especially those developed in the context of an (emergent) transnational network of organizing around environmental and social justice issues in the global networks of electronics production. A reappropriation of 'sustainability' as conflictual dynamics giving rise to alternative forms of agency serves as point of departure. Building on earlier work on environmental justice as a minority social movement signalling the rise of new forms of organizing, these explorations draw on a variety of approaches (environmental debt, environmental/resource rights, social ecology and resource conflict, but also occupational health and safety, approaches to a 'just transition', etc.) to bring into views actors and agendas often considered separately, and thus deprived analytically of possible encounters that could facilitate a joining of forces on the organizational level.