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Growth of a Megacity: Planning Jakarta in the Post-Suburban Era [Kõva köide]

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  • Formaat: Hardback, 292 pages, kõrgus x laius: 229x152 mm, 20 b&w illustrations
  • Ilmumisaeg: 31-Mar-2026
  • Kirjastus: University of Hawai'i Press
  • ISBN-13: 9798880701476
  • Formaat: Hardback, 292 pages, kõrgus x laius: 229x152 mm, 20 b&w illustrations
  • Ilmumisaeg: 31-Mar-2026
  • Kirjastus: University of Hawai'i Press
  • ISBN-13: 9798880701476

Jakarta, one of the largest metropolitan areas in Southeast Asia, has grown from 150,000 residents in the first half of the twentieth century to more than 31 million residents in 2024. This tremendous population growth and the expansion of the urbanized areas have created several challenges as well as exposed the role of planning in shaping and managing the Jakarta Metropolitan Area (JMA), also known as Jabodetabek.

This edited volume argues that Jakarta exhibits several features of “post-suburban” development, but at the same time, the central area continues to attract population and urban growth. Thus, this metropolitan region is featuring a different type of post-suburban development that might also be considered as an “early stage” of post-suburbanization. The inner city and the suburbs (inner and outer suburbs) are all experiencing a massive physical, social, and economic transformation, albeit with different processes of attraction and rejection/eviction of different social groups. Suburban development and post-suburban development need to be considered from a multiperspective, looking at the changes in residential, industrial, and commercial development, as well as the impact of this growth. Impacts range from changes in employment and infrastructure, to impact on the environment, including disasters and land degradation, and the social fabric, such as segregation and gentrification.

This is the first book that analyzes the challenges and practices of planning in the post-suburbanization of Jakarta from a wide thematic perspective, in a single volume. It examines spatial, environmental, economic, and social impacts of the post-suburbanization phenomenon and provides evidence to advance the discussion of policies tackling these adverse impacts and looking into the vision of the JMA for the next twenty years. Collective effort of twenty-two contributors, including academics, planners, urban designers, and architects, the chapters are organized into four parts: economic aspects; environmental concerns; housing and public space, and gentrification and displacement. Growth of a Megacity aims to contribute to the literature on urban planning in Indonesia, and Jakarta in particular, and provides an updated view of post-suburban development in Jakarta intending to help inform future policy-making.

Arvustused

"The meticulously crafted and insightfully argued contributions to this fresh new Rukmana/Roitman study of Jakarta explores the megacitys profound spatial, demographic, economic, and political transformations over the past two decades. The contributors examine the economic restructuring of the urban periphery, environmental degradation and accompanying climate hazards throughout the metropolis, and gentrification processes occurring both inside the city and its increasingly urbanized suburbs. Most important, the contributors identify not just those benefitting from post-suburbanization but also the larger share of those still being left out. Growth of a Megacity pinpoints the interventions needed to realize an inclusive post-suburban metropolis." - Christopher Silver, professor emeritus, University of Florida

"One of the most alluring and studied megacities of the Global South, Jakartas myriad complexities and evolving challenges continue to intrigue scholars. Rukmana and Roitman have curated laudable attention to less appreciated contemporary dynamics shaping this behemoth, which, as they argue, embody a unique "post-suburban" phenomenon emergent in southern urban planning and development. The books historical and prognostic insights into its spatial, ecological, institutional, and equity dimensions are instructive for familiar observers and the uninitiated alike. The welcome contributions by emerging scholars of Indonesian urbanization should encourage further inquiry into cities undergoing post-suburban turns elsewhere, on the archipelago and beyond." - Ashok Das, professor, University of Hawaii at Mnoa

"This book provides a comprehensive account of Jakarta in the post-suburban era. As one of the fastest-growing megacities in the Global South, Jakarta represents a complex urban landscape shaped by rapid economic expansion, environmental pressures, spatial transformation, and social change. The book offers a focused examination of these dynamics within the context of a megacity in the Global South, presenting an integrated analysis of economic, environmental, physical, and social dimensions. The volume delivers valuable insights into contemporary urban development. It is a highly recommended resource for practitioners, researchers, and academics interested in urban studies, planning, and the evolving challenges of megacities." - Sri Maryati, professor, Institut Teknologi Bandung

Deden Rukmana is a professor and the director of the Master of City and Regional Planning program at the University of Texas at Arlington.

Sonia Roitman is associate professor in development planning at the University of Queensland, Australia.