Haryo Winarso | Institut Teknologi Bandung (original) (raw)
Papers by Haryo Winarso
A principal objective of Indonesia's Integrated Urban Infrastructure Development Programme (IUIDP... more A principal objective of Indonesia's Integrated Urban Infrastructure Development Programme (IUIDP) was to enhance local government capacity to manage urban infrastructure investment and construction. It is argued in the following that the IUIDP has has achieved little towards this end because it has remained a programme of central government which is still alien to the local governments who should have adopted it. Local governments have not been motivated to find the funds for repaying the loans involved and they continue to treat the IUIDP process as separate from their traditional budgeting and infrastructure provision activities. Consequently, the programme has not become sustainable.
International Development Planning Review, 2002
Bijdragen tot de Taal-, Land-en Volkenkunde, 2001
... annually. This was achieved by private developers in the Jabotabek area, an emerging mega-urb... more ... annually. This was achieved by private developers in the Jabotabek area, an emerging mega-urban region in Indonesia,between the 1970s and the 1990s (Winarso 1999; Winarso and Kombaitan 1995). In the Jabotabek area ...
Environment and planning. A, 2010
Abstract. In this paper we seek to extend ideas about communicative planning and capacity buildin... more Abstract. In this paper we seek to extend ideas about communicative planning and capacity building in collective action. In doing so, we combine political opportunity structure and Kingdon's policy window in order to develop an agency-centered approach to opportunity. ...
Unpublished PhD Thesis. Bartlett School of …, 2000
APSA 8th international conference, Penang, 2005
The development of large scale housing in Indonesia by private sector, particularly in Jakarta Me... more The development of large scale housing in Indonesia by private sector, particularly in Jakarta Metropolitan Areas (JMA), is substantial. Within 20 years, more than 15 large-scale housing estates have been developed and these private activities have been able to urbanise 16,600 hectares of rural land. These activities were also blamed as one of the factors that triggered the economic crisis
Urban growth and development in …, 1999
International Development Planning Review, 2007
Spatial transformation in peri-urban areas has provided an emerging picture of the growth of many... more Spatial transformation in peri-urban areas has provided an emerging picture of the growth of many metropolitan regions in developing countries. In this paper, we present a new perspective on this transformation from the viewpoint of the developing and transitional countries of East Asia, and suggest its potential implications for planning and governance. First, we reveal the uniqueness of peri-urbanisation in these countries in relation to its dependence on the metropolitan centres, capital accumulation and dynamic coexistence of urban and rural livelihoods. Although we acknowledge the growing contribution of periurban areas to regional economies, this is still at the expense of spatial cohesion, regional sustainability and quality of the physical environment. It is argued that these undesirable consequences have been a reflection of fragmented institutional landscapes, particularly at the regional level. In order to address this institutional fragmentation, we suggest a need to transform current domestic planning systems, strengthen collaborative approaches, promote innovative institution-building and consider rescaling of governance.
Habitat International, 2002
Before the economic crisis hit Indonesia in 1997, land development had been one of the prime sect... more Before the economic crisis hit Indonesia in 1997, land development had been one of the prime sectors for investment. Land development companies were mushrooming. They were basically working together in share holdership or were interconnected through family relationships. They were also related to the ex-First Family of Indonesia. This had given them the possibilities to influence any policy and regulation concerning land development and thus distorting the housing market in the area. The buyers of the houses produced by the developers were mostly young professionals who worked in the private sector, classified as middle and high-income segments. The excessive land development, done by a few developers only targeted a small minority of the riches had been part of the trigger of the monetary crisis and caused calamity of the country as a whole.
A principal objective of Indonesia's Integrated Urban Infrastructure Development Programme (IUIDP... more A principal objective of Indonesia's Integrated Urban Infrastructure Development Programme (IUIDP) was to enhance local government capacity to manage urban infrastructure investment and construction. It is argued in the following that the IUIDP has has achieved little towards this end because it has remained a programme of central government which is still alien to the local governments who should have adopted it. Local governments have not been motivated to find the funds for repaying the loans involved and they continue to treat the IUIDP process as separate from their traditional budgeting and infrastructure provision activities. Consequently, the programme has not become sustainable.
International Development Planning Review, 2002
Bijdragen tot de Taal-, Land-en Volkenkunde, 2001
... annually. This was achieved by private developers in the Jabotabek area, an emerging mega-urb... more ... annually. This was achieved by private developers in the Jabotabek area, an emerging mega-urban region in Indonesia,between the 1970s and the 1990s (Winarso 1999; Winarso and Kombaitan 1995). In the Jabotabek area ...
Environment and planning. A, 2010
Abstract. In this paper we seek to extend ideas about communicative planning and capacity buildin... more Abstract. In this paper we seek to extend ideas about communicative planning and capacity building in collective action. In doing so, we combine political opportunity structure and Kingdon's policy window in order to develop an agency-centered approach to opportunity. ...
Unpublished PhD Thesis. Bartlett School of …, 2000
APSA 8th international conference, Penang, 2005
The development of large scale housing in Indonesia by private sector, particularly in Jakarta Me... more The development of large scale housing in Indonesia by private sector, particularly in Jakarta Metropolitan Areas (JMA), is substantial. Within 20 years, more than 15 large-scale housing estates have been developed and these private activities have been able to urbanise 16,600 hectares of rural land. These activities were also blamed as one of the factors that triggered the economic crisis
Urban growth and development in …, 1999
International Development Planning Review, 2007
Spatial transformation in peri-urban areas has provided an emerging picture of the growth of many... more Spatial transformation in peri-urban areas has provided an emerging picture of the growth of many metropolitan regions in developing countries. In this paper, we present a new perspective on this transformation from the viewpoint of the developing and transitional countries of East Asia, and suggest its potential implications for planning and governance. First, we reveal the uniqueness of peri-urbanisation in these countries in relation to its dependence on the metropolitan centres, capital accumulation and dynamic coexistence of urban and rural livelihoods. Although we acknowledge the growing contribution of periurban areas to regional economies, this is still at the expense of spatial cohesion, regional sustainability and quality of the physical environment. It is argued that these undesirable consequences have been a reflection of fragmented institutional landscapes, particularly at the regional level. In order to address this institutional fragmentation, we suggest a need to transform current domestic planning systems, strengthen collaborative approaches, promote innovative institution-building and consider rescaling of governance.
Habitat International, 2002
Before the economic crisis hit Indonesia in 1997, land development had been one of the prime sect... more Before the economic crisis hit Indonesia in 1997, land development had been one of the prime sectors for investment. Land development companies were mushrooming. They were basically working together in share holdership or were interconnected through family relationships. They were also related to the ex-First Family of Indonesia. This had given them the possibilities to influence any policy and regulation concerning land development and thus distorting the housing market in the area. The buyers of the houses produced by the developers were mostly young professionals who worked in the private sector, classified as middle and high-income segments. The excessive land development, done by a few developers only targeted a small minority of the riches had been part of the trigger of the monetary crisis and caused calamity of the country as a whole.