Mega Urban Regions of Southeast AsiaA distinguishing feature of recent urbanization in the ASEAN countries of Thailand, Malaysia, the Philippines, Singapore, and Indonesia is the outward extension of their mega-cities (Bangkok, Jakarta, Manila, Singapore, and Kuala Lumpur) beyond the metropolitan borders, resulting in the establishment of new towns, industrial estates, and housing projects in previously rural areas. This process has both positive and negative effects. On one side, household incomes and employment opportunities are increasing, but on the other, the growth often causes serious problems in terms of environmental deterioration, conflicting land uses, and inadequate housing and service provisions. Mega Urban Regions of Southeast Asia is the first comprehensive work on the subject of ASEAN mega-urban regions. The contributors review T.G. McGee's original idea of desakota zones, and offer arguments both for and against this concept, making a significant contribution to our understanding of the true face of ASEAN cities. The book brings together authors from around the world and will be of interest to a wide audience, including demographers, urban planners, geographers, sociologists, economists, civil servants and development consultants. |
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The Mega-Urban Regions of Southeast Asia focuses on one facet of change: urbanization and its primary manifestation, the huge, sprawling regions centred on the old urban cores of Bangkok, Kuala Lumpur, Singapore, Jakarta, and Manila.
Metropolitan regional growth tends to sprawl along major expressways and railroad lines radiating out from the urban cores, and leapfrogs in all directions, putting down new towns, industrial estates, housing projects, and even golf ...
extent and long regional peripheries, their radii sometimes stretching 75 to 100 km from the urban core. The entire territory - comprising the central city, the developments within the transportation corridors, the satellite towns and ...
By 2020, most people in the ASEAN core region lived in urban areas. Projections of urban population growth made in the early 1990s proved to be underestimates, and close to two-thirds of the population now lived in urban areas, ...
Much of the central urban core was now given over to high-rise office buildings, shopping centres, and government departments. These activities were located in a number of central business districts in what came to be called by ...
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Contents
43 | |
Case Studies of ASEAN MegaUrban Regions | 267 |
Conclusions and Policy Implications | 341 |
References | 356 |
Contributors | 374 |
Index | 376 |
Other editions - View all
The Mega-urban Regions of Southeast Asia Terence Gary McGee,T. G. McGee,Ira M. Robinson No preview available - 1995 |