Zeitbombe Jabotabek? Metro-Jakarta im Spannungsfeld von internationaler Investition, ökologischem Desaster und politischer Labilisierung

Autor(en)
Günter Spreitzhofer, Martin Heintel
Abstrakt

Indonesia's current social and political tensions culminate in Metro‐Jakarta (Jabotabek), South‐East Asia's biggest urban agglomeration of 20 million inhabitants, which is located in western Java. Since the beginning of Suharto's 'New Order' policy (1967), the capital has been pushed as a centre of international (mainly East Asian) investment. A number of deregulation programmes increased the attraction of the (sub)urban area of Jabotabek for polluting, labour‐intensive and high‐wage production (for Indonesian standards), which became responsible for the tripling of Jakarta's population due to enormous migration within the last three decades. However, the lack of adequate infrastructural improvement increased both ecological problems (transport, air pollution, water availability, waste disposal) and socio‐economic disparities, which resulted in growing political unrest and a standstill of Jabotabek's economic growth by 1998. Jakarta's desired status of a 'global city' seems to be unrealistic considering the agglomeration's growing gap between rich and poor and its persistent lack of adequate infrastructural management.

Organisation(en)
Institut für Geographie und Regionalforschung
Journal
Asien: the German journal on contemporary Asia
Band
78
Seiten
50-69
ISSN
0721-5231
DOI
https://doi.org/10.11588/asien.2001.78.13636
Publikationsdatum
01-2001
Peer-reviewed
Ja
ÖFOS 2012
507015 Regionalforschung
Sustainable Development Goals
SDG 8 – Menschenwürdige Arbeit und Wirtschaftswachstum, SDG 11 – Nachhaltige Städte und Gemeinden
Link zum Portal
https://ucrisportal.univie.ac.at/de/publications/45cf2dc6-4fd5-4128-956d-9ebabeba37f2