River's End: The violence of indigenous riverine urbanization in the making of Indonesia's new capital

IF 7 1区 经济学 Q1 DEVELOPMENT STUDIES
Vandy Yoga Swara , Kei Otsuki , Femke van Noorloos , Michelle Kooy
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Abstract

This article analyzes the consequences of the state-led urbanization of riverine indigenous communities in Indonesia. Specifically, we examine how the development of urban water infrastructure in the context of the new capital city construction in East Kalimantan has changed indigenous relations with the river, and how this change further led to reconfigure indigenous people's relationship with their cultural heritage. Engaging with the political ecology of urbanization, indigenous studies, and infrastructural violence scholarship, and based on qualitative fieldwork including semi-structured interviews and participant observation conducted in 2022, 2023, and 2024, we conceptualize the process of change as indigenous riverine urbanization and show how it turns both materially and symbolically violent. Materially, the modernist interventions in water and heritage infrastructure cause the loss of access to and coexistence with the river; and symbolically, they force the indigenous communities to accept new ways of living as a new ‘museum’. We argue that such multifaceted violence is produced through a universalized narrative of inclusivity in state-led public infrastructure projects, particularly in water provision and cultural preservation. The infrastructure projects work to sustain existing inequalities while also allowing indigenous communities to undertake a broader cultural recognition strategy. We recommend shifting from inclusion approaches focused on compensation and recognition toward a planning approach that involves indigenous peoples as planners, integrating their knowledge into urban infrastructure planning.
河流的尽头:在印度尼西亚新首都的建设过程中,土著河流城市化的暴力
这篇文章分析了国家主导的城市化对印尼河流土著社区的影响。具体来说,我们研究了在东加里曼丹新首都建设的背景下,城市水利基础设施的发展如何改变了土著居民与河流的关系,以及这种变化如何进一步导致重新配置土著居民与他们的文化遗产的关系。结合城市化的政治生态、土著研究和基础设施暴力学术研究,并基于定性的实地调查,包括在2022年、2023年和2024年进行的半结构化访谈和参与者观察,我们将变化过程概念化为土著河流城市化,并展示了它如何在物质上和象征上变得暴力。从物质上讲,现代主义对水和遗产基础设施的干预导致了与河流的接触和共存的丧失;象征性地,他们迫使土著社区作为一个新的“博物馆”接受新的生活方式。我们认为,这种多方面的暴力是通过国家主导的公共基础设施项目,特别是在供水和文化保护方面的包容性的普遍叙述产生的。基础设施项目致力于维持现有的不平等,同时也使土著社区能够采取更广泛的文化承认战略。我们建议从注重补偿和认可的包容方法转向让土著人民作为规划者参与的规划方法,将他们的知识纳入城市基础设施规划。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
10.50
自引率
10.30%
发文量
151
审稿时长
38 days
期刊介绍: Habitat International is dedicated to the study of urban and rural human settlements: their planning, design, production and management. Its main focus is on urbanisation in its broadest sense in the developing world. However, increasingly the interrelationships and linkages between cities and towns in the developing and developed worlds are becoming apparent and solutions to the problems that result are urgently required. The economic, social, technological and political systems of the world are intertwined and changes in one region almost always affect other regions.
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