Moulding citizenship: urban water and the (dis)appearing kampungs

Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceedingBook chapterResearchpeer-review

Standard

Moulding citizenship : urban water and the (dis)appearing kampungs. / Putri, Prathiwi Widyatmi.

Urban water trajectories. ed. / Sarah Bell; Adriana Allen; Pascale Hofmann; Tse-Hui The. Springer, 2016. p. 193-207 (Future City; No. 6).

Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceedingBook chapterResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Putri, PW 2016, Moulding citizenship: urban water and the (dis)appearing kampungs. in S Bell, A Allen, P Hofmann & T-H The (eds), Urban water trajectories. Springer, Future City, no. 6, pp. 193-207. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-42686-0_13

APA

Putri, P. W. (2016). Moulding citizenship: urban water and the (dis)appearing kampungs. In S. Bell, A. Allen, P. Hofmann, & T-H. The (Eds.), Urban water trajectories (pp. 193-207). Springer. Future City No. 6 https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-42686-0_13

Vancouver

Putri PW. Moulding citizenship: urban water and the (dis)appearing kampungs. In Bell S, Allen A, Hofmann P, The T-H, editors, Urban water trajectories. Springer. 2016. p. 193-207. (Future City; No. 6). https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-42686-0_13

Author

Putri, Prathiwi Widyatmi. / Moulding citizenship : urban water and the (dis)appearing kampungs. Urban water trajectories. editor / Sarah Bell ; Adriana Allen ; Pascale Hofmann ; Tse-Hui The. Springer, 2016. pp. 193-207 (Future City; No. 6).

Bibtex

@inbook{e0222972ea9149d995ca3f4c0b7e11b9,
title = "Moulding citizenship: urban water and the (dis)appearing kampungs",
abstract = "Establishing a modern domestic water management system in Batavia, colonial Jakarta, involved struggles over territories between different actors. The multifaceted territorial character of managing water and land reveals the highly contested notion of citizenship as there were continuous processes of service inclusion and exclusion within complex interactions among different state institutions, the private sector and communities. While the twentieth century colonial government addressed water and sanitation issues as part of modernity projects, urban kampung communities simultaneously used diverse socio-ecological networks to meet their water and sanitation needs. However, their strategies did not always comply with the modern sanitation standards idealised by the colonial state. The existence of Batavia{\textquoteright}s kampungs preceding and following the inception of modern planning system reflects their capability of undergoing socio-spatial transformations within the contexts of limited state intervention on the provision of basic services and under the condition of unequal spatial development processes. The kampung dynamics seem to call into question the existing form of state-led management systems in providing water and sanitation services. The systems pretty much favour the marketisation agenda at the operational level, while keep idealising universal access to services at the discursive level despite the exclusionary nature of infrastructure planning. The persistence of kampungs has likely proven their socio-ecological relevance, and potentially forms the foundation of an alternative paradigm of citizenship for an improved governance system in the urban water sector.",
author = "Putri, {Prathiwi Widyatmi}",
year = "2016",
doi = "10.1007/978-3-319-42686-0_13",
language = "English",
isbn = "978-3-319-42684-6",
series = "Future City",
publisher = "Springer",
number = "6",
pages = "193--207",
editor = "Sarah Bell and Adriana Allen and Pascale Hofmann and Tse-Hui The",
booktitle = "Urban water trajectories",
address = "Switzerland",

}

RIS

TY - CHAP

T1 - Moulding citizenship

T2 - urban water and the (dis)appearing kampungs

AU - Putri, Prathiwi Widyatmi

PY - 2016

Y1 - 2016

N2 - Establishing a modern domestic water management system in Batavia, colonial Jakarta, involved struggles over territories between different actors. The multifaceted territorial character of managing water and land reveals the highly contested notion of citizenship as there were continuous processes of service inclusion and exclusion within complex interactions among different state institutions, the private sector and communities. While the twentieth century colonial government addressed water and sanitation issues as part of modernity projects, urban kampung communities simultaneously used diverse socio-ecological networks to meet their water and sanitation needs. However, their strategies did not always comply with the modern sanitation standards idealised by the colonial state. The existence of Batavia’s kampungs preceding and following the inception of modern planning system reflects their capability of undergoing socio-spatial transformations within the contexts of limited state intervention on the provision of basic services and under the condition of unequal spatial development processes. The kampung dynamics seem to call into question the existing form of state-led management systems in providing water and sanitation services. The systems pretty much favour the marketisation agenda at the operational level, while keep idealising universal access to services at the discursive level despite the exclusionary nature of infrastructure planning. The persistence of kampungs has likely proven their socio-ecological relevance, and potentially forms the foundation of an alternative paradigm of citizenship for an improved governance system in the urban water sector.

AB - Establishing a modern domestic water management system in Batavia, colonial Jakarta, involved struggles over territories between different actors. The multifaceted territorial character of managing water and land reveals the highly contested notion of citizenship as there were continuous processes of service inclusion and exclusion within complex interactions among different state institutions, the private sector and communities. While the twentieth century colonial government addressed water and sanitation issues as part of modernity projects, urban kampung communities simultaneously used diverse socio-ecological networks to meet their water and sanitation needs. However, their strategies did not always comply with the modern sanitation standards idealised by the colonial state. The existence of Batavia’s kampungs preceding and following the inception of modern planning system reflects their capability of undergoing socio-spatial transformations within the contexts of limited state intervention on the provision of basic services and under the condition of unequal spatial development processes. The kampung dynamics seem to call into question the existing form of state-led management systems in providing water and sanitation services. The systems pretty much favour the marketisation agenda at the operational level, while keep idealising universal access to services at the discursive level despite the exclusionary nature of infrastructure planning. The persistence of kampungs has likely proven their socio-ecological relevance, and potentially forms the foundation of an alternative paradigm of citizenship for an improved governance system in the urban water sector.

U2 - 10.1007/978-3-319-42686-0_13

DO - 10.1007/978-3-319-42686-0_13

M3 - Book chapter

SN - 978-3-319-42684-6

T3 - Future City

SP - 193

EP - 207

BT - Urban water trajectories

A2 - Bell, Sarah

A2 - Allen, Adriana

A2 - Hofmann, Pascale

A2 - The, Tse-Hui

PB - Springer

ER -

ID: 168910638