"Funded by the European Research Council (ERC) project, Yanliu Lin and her team are pioneers in capturing an emerging trend towards more collaborative planning in China. In urban regeneration, heritage protection, and environmental governance, their rigorous and grounded observations are profound. Together, they generate important insights into the nature of governance in China and related changes in institutions and power relations. This is an important and insightful book on planning, geography, and China’s development."Fulong Wu, Bartlett Professor of Planning, University College London (UCL), United Kingdom."The book offers a highly interesting compendium of contributions on the practice of collaborative planning in China. It critically examines this practice from three perspectives: institutions, power relations, and the public sphere. What makes this compendium particularly valuable is that, although the theory of collaborative planning originates in a democratic institutional context (Western planning practice), its application within China's authoritarian institutional environment offers valuable opportunities to challenge, adapt, and reconceptualize its universal claims, thus contributing to the reconceptualization of collaborative planning theory.Stan Geertman, emeritus Professor of Planning Support Science, Utrecht University, The Netherlands.