Towards a Global View on Suburban Gentrification: From Redevelopment to Development
Delik Hudalah(1*), Nabilla Adharina(2)
(1) School of Architecture, Planning and Policy Development, Bandung Institute of Technology
(2) School of Architecture, Planning and Policy Development, Bandung Institute of Technology
(*) Corresponding Author
Abstract
The gentrification literature, which is originated in the urban context, has now extended to suburb. Using content analysis on previous related case studies, this article shows that suburban gentrification is not necessarily a natural phenomenon resulting from disinvestment as the neighborhood lifecycle approach commonly suggests. As long as there is a development trigger, the suburb can gentrify anytime as it generally has a lower land value and a lower risk than urban area. The private sector and government play a key role in initiating and facilitating it to happen. In suburban context, the impacts of gentrification is complex, entailing varying negative and positive implications for the physical environment, the economies, and the society.
Keywords
Full Text:
PDFReferences
Biro, J. (2007). Gentrification: deliberate displacement, or natural social movement? The ParkPlace Economist, 15(1), 42–46.
Bishop, L., & Kuula-Luumi, A. (2017). Revisiting qualitative data reuse: A decade on. Sage Open, 7(1), 2158244016685136.
Borsdorf, A. (2004). ON THE WAY TO POST-SUBURBIA? Insights on Outskirts, 7.
Boyd, M. (2008). Defensive Development The Role of Racial Conflict in Gentrification. Urban Affairs Review, 43(6), 751–776.
Charles, S. L. (2011). Suburban Gentrification: Understanding the Determinants of Single-family Residential Redevelopment, A Case Study of the Inner-Ring Suburbs of Chicago, IL, 2000-2010. Cambridge, MA: Joint Center for Housing Studies of Harvard University.
Fine, A. S., & Lindberg, J. (2002). Protecting America’s historic neighborhoods: taming the teardown trend. Washington, DC: National Trust for Historic Preservation.
Forsyth, A. (2012). Defining suburbs. Journal of Planning Literature, 27(3), 270–281.
Gellert, P. K., & Lynch, B. D. (2003). Mega-projects as displacements. International Social Science Journal, 55(175), 15–25.
Glass, R. (1964). Introduction: Aspects of change. In Centre for Urban Studies (Ed.), London: Aspects of Change. London: MacKibbon and Kee.
Goldman, M. (2011). Speculating on the next world city. In A. Roy & A. Ong (Eds.), Worlding Cities: Asian Experiments and the Art of Being Global (pp. 229–258). West Sussex: Wiley-Blackwell.
Hackworth, J., & Rekers, J. (2005). Ethnic Packaging and Gentrification The Case of Four Neighborhoods in Toronto. Urban Affairs Review, 41(2), 211–236.
He, S. (2007). State-sponsored gentrification under market transition the case of Shanghai. Urban Affairs Review, 43(2), 171–198.
Hoover, E. M., & Vernon, R. (1962). Anatomy of a metropolis: The changing distribution of people and jobs within the new york metropolitan region. Garden City, NY: Doubleday.
Hoyt, H. (1939). The structure and growth of residential neighborhoods in American cities. Washington, DC: Federal Housing Administration.
Huang, W. (2010). Immigration and Gentrification – a case study of cultural restructuring in Flushing, Queens. Diversities, 12(1), 56–69.
Hudalah, D., Winarso, H., & Woltjer, J. (2016). Gentrifying the peri-urban: Land use conflicts and institutional dynamics at the frontier of an Indonesian metropolis. Urban Studies, 53(3), 593–608.
Hufbauer, G. C., & Severn, B. W. (1974). The economic demolition of old buildings. Urban Studies, 11(3), 349–351.
Kennedy, M., & Leonard, P. (2001). Dealing with neighborhood change: A primer on gentrification and policy choices. Brookings Institution Washington, DC.
Leaf, M. (2002). A tale of two villages: globalization and peri-urban change in China and Vietnam. Cities, 19(1), 23–31.
Lees, L. (2000). A reappraisal of gentrification: towards a ‘geography of gentrification’. Progress in Human Geography, 24(3), 389–408.
Lees, L., Shin, H. B., & López-Morales, E. (2016). Planetary gentrification. Cambridge: Polity Press.
Lucy, W. H., & Phillips, D. L. (2001). Suburbs and the census: Patterns of growth and decline. Brookings Institution, Center on Urban and Metropolitan Policy.
Marcuse, P. (1985). Gentrification, abandonment, and displacement: Connections, causes, and policy responses in New York City. Wash. UJ Urb. & Contemp. L., 28, 195–240.
Munt, I. (1987). Economic restructuring, culture, and gentrification: a case study in Battersea, London. Environment and Planning A, 19(9), 1175–1197.
Murdie, R., & Teixeira, C. (2010). The impact of gentrification on ethnic neighbourhoods in Toronto: A case study of Little Portugal. Urban Studies.
Niedt, C. (2006). Gentrification and the grassroots: Popular support in the revanchist suburb. Journal of Urban Affairs, 28(2), 99–120.
Parlette, V. M. (2012). On the Margins of Gentrification: The production and governance of suburban ‘decline’in Toronto’s inner suburbs. University of Toronto. Retrieved from https://tspace.library.utoronto.ca/handle/1807/67308
Prouse, V., Grant, J. L., Ramos, H., & Radice, M. (2015). Assessing neighbourhood change: Gentrification and suburban decline in a mid-sized city (Working Paper). Dalhousie University, Halifax.
Raghuram, G., & Sundaram, S. S. (2009). Lessons from Leveraging Land: A Case of Bangalore Mysore Infrastructure Corridor (Working Paper No. 2009-02-04). Indian Institute of Management, Ahmedabad. Retrieved from http://indiatogether.org/campaigns/bmic/bmicfaq.htm
Rhodes, R. A., Binder, S. A., & Rockman, B. A. (2008). The Oxford handbook of political institutions. Oxford University Press. Retrieved from https://www.google.com/books?hl=en&lr=&id=gOXLSMMDb6cC&oi=fnd&pg=PR5&dq=The+Oxford+Handbook+of+Political+Institutions&ots=FrR1jChDaZ&sig=ZdZ12rpntJwDHMz273u7PHEEBfk
Schaffer, R., & Smith, N. (1986). The gentrification of Harlem? Annals of the Association of American Geographers, 76(3), 347–365.
Shin, H. B. (2009). Residential redevelopment and the entrepreneurial local state: The implications of Beijing’s shifting emphasis on urban redevelopment policies. Urban Studies, 46(13), 2815–2839.
Shin, H. B. (2016). Economic transition and speculative urbanisation in China: Gentrification versus dispossession. Urban Studies, 53(3), 471–489.
Slater, T. (2006). The eviction of critical perspectives from gentrification research. International Journal of Urban and Regional Research, 30(4), 737–757.
Smith, N. (1979). Toward a theory of gentrification a back to the city movement by capital, not people. Journal of the American Planning Association, 45(4), 538–548.
Smith, N. (1987). Gentrification and the rent gap. Annals of the Association of American Geographers, 77(3), 462–465.
Streetar, R. (2013). Disinvestment and Suburban Decline (Dissertation/ Thesis). Hamline University. Retrieved from http://digitalcommons.hamline.edu/hsb_all/4/
Thissen, W. A., & Walker, W. E. (2013). Public Policy Analysis. Springer. Retrieved from http://link.springer.com/content/pdf/10.1007/978-1-4614-4602-6.pdf
Van Hulten, A. (2010). Global flows, gentrification and displacement in Melbourne’s Inner West (Working Paper No. 49). Centre for Strategic Economic Studies, Victoria University, Melbourne. Retrieved from http://citeseerx.ist.psu.edu/viewdoc/download?doi=10.1.1.372.6697&rep=rep1&type=pdf
Wulff, M., & Lobo, M. (2009). The new gentrifiers: the role of households and migration in reshaping Melbourne’s core and inner suburbs. Urban Policy and Research, 27(3), 315–331.
Zhang, T. (2002). Urban development and a socialist pro-growth coalition in Shanghai. Urban Affairs Review, 37(4), 475–499.
Zukin, S. (1989). Loft living: culture and capital in urban change. New Brunswick, NJ: Rutgers University Press.
DOI: https://doi.org/10.22146/ijg.34813
Article Metrics
Abstract views : 4229 | views : 2965Refbacks
- There are currently no refbacks.
Copyright (c) 2019 Indonesian Journal of Geography
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License.
Accredited Journal, Based on Decree of the Minister of Research, Technology and Higher Education, Republic of Indonesia Number 225/E/KPT/2022, Vol 54 No 1 the Year 2022 - Vol 58 No 2 the Year 2026 (accreditation certificate download)
ISSN 2354-9114 (online), ISSN 0024-9521 (print)
IJG STATISTIC