RE-FRAMING URBAN GREEN SPACES PLANNING TOWARDS FLOOD RESILIENCE THROUGH SOCIO-ECOLOGICAL RESILIENCE
The asymmetric paradigm shift in planning theory has led to an asymmetric development in spatial planning thoughts and practices. In the last half a century, planning content has remained predominantly positivist construct, while planning processes have shown a gradual shift towards post-structur...
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Format: | Dissertations |
Language: | Indonesia |
Online Access: | https://digilib.itb.ac.id/gdl/view/46811 |
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Institution: | Institut Teknologi Bandung |
Language: | Indonesia |
Summary: | The asymmetric paradigm shift in planning theory has led to an asymmetric
development in spatial planning thoughts and practices. In the last half a century,
planning content has remained predominantly positivist construct, while planning
processes have shown a gradual shift towards post-structuralist. In the ecological
context, attention to turn planning theory into the implication of ecological
considerations has taken up through political ecology and environmental ethics.
However both contributions seem to be limited compared to the extensive focus on
the new trajectory of planning theories from collaborative and post-structuralist
which demand human-nature relationship to be considered. Under positivist
construct through its linier mindset; ways to deal with the complex, unpredictable,
historically and geographically variable characteristics of nature have been
replaces with techno-managerial planning, expert management and
administration, instead of promoting human-nature relationships.
In the context of urban green space planning in Indonesia, this reflects in the
practice of urban green spaces provision through standard approach which based
on population number served. The standard approach has been applied throughout
all location in Indonesia without regard to the uniqueness of urban ecosystem in
each geographic areas, and the impact of human activities on its future
sustainability. The paradigm shift on urban ecology towards “ecology of cities”
and “ecology for cities” has provided an opportunity for contemporary planning
theory to adopt recent ecological theories which enable promoting human-nature
relationship in the planning practices. Socio-ecological resilience (SER) is among
of them.
The most significant contribution of SER for planning is its role as a different and
useful frame for both problem-setting and problem-solving. SER based on
assumptions of non-linier dynamics of a linked socio-ecological systems (SESs)
which challenged the assumption on equilibrium, stability and predictability of
traditional notion on natural resource management; and provide priority to more
adaptive modes of governance and attention to cross-scale interaction. Several
recent studies applied SER as an analytical method as an alternative to standard
approach in determining priority locations of urban green spaces. They analyzesvi
the synergies and trade-offs among demand of ecosystem services to determine the
priority locations and shown that the current urban green spaces have not consider
community needs. However none of them reveal its causes and discuss the disparity
between supply and demand of ecosystem services during their analysis to
determine the priority locations, especially to consider equitable distribution and
resilient supply of ecosystem services. In addition, few studies link the priority
locations with urban resilience and climate-related hazard.
This research address the gap and utilize three SER propositions through the
critical realism methodology. The research applied and advanced several SES and
SER framework to analyze socio-ecological system dynamics in study area.
Ecosystem Service Framework was applied to analyze the disparity between supply
and demand of ecosystem services in examining the equitable distribution and
resilient supply of flood protection. The DPSIR Framework was applied to examine
how far the existing policies and programs could leverage co-benefit between the
priority location of the urban green space with flood mitigation and adaptation
measures in order to achieve urban flood resilience. This research advanced
Resilience Planning Characteristics Framework, Critical Institutional Analysis
and Development Framework, and meta-inferential to analyze governance and its
challenges in the implementation of equitable distribution and resilient supply of
urban green space planning toward urban resilience in Indonesia. The research
area is Bandung City and the Upper Citarum River Basin.
The result shows that current and future urban green spaces in Bandung City have
not been strategically placed for equitable distribution and resilient supply of
ecosystem services. The current spatial planning and strategic environmental
assessment have not adequately address urban flood resilience in the future. Those
conditions due to the governance of spatial planning and strategis environmental
assessment formulation have not been conducted in adaptive-manner. Both
normative and analytic challenges in spatial planning practices have caused the
non-adaptive governance. These two challenges have caused limited public
participation and in-adequate carrying capacity assessment in spatial planning
process, in which lead to prioritize economic interests within spatial planning
content, and overlooked the previous spatial plan violation. The research findings
provide an ecological landscape-based urban green space planning model to
address the challenges of urban green space planning in balancing the needs and
sustainability of urban ecosystem services. This study also provides new thesis on
the challenges of spatial planning practices within science-based policy framework. |
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