INSTITUTIONAL CHANGE AND POWER RELATION IN LARGE-SCALE LAND DEVELOPMENT: A CASE STUDY FROM THE NORTH COAST OF JAKARTA RECLAMATION

Large-scale land development refers to development over a large area with high investment value from the public and private sectors realized in various land use changes. The involvement of actors with various interests in resource management and control of development impacts results in power dyn...

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Main Author: Arfida Paramita, Aulia
Format: Dissertations
Language:Indonesia
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Online Access:https://digilib.itb.ac.id/gdl/view/81173
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Institution: Institut Teknologi Bandung
Language: Indonesia
id id-itb.:81173
spelling id-itb.:811732024-05-14T12:50:10ZINSTITUTIONAL CHANGE AND POWER RELATION IN LARGE-SCALE LAND DEVELOPMENT: A CASE STUDY FROM THE NORTH COAST OF JAKARTA RECLAMATION Arfida Paramita, Aulia Perencanaan wilayah Indonesia Dissertations Large-Scale Land Development, Institutional Change, Power Relation, Critical Realism, North Coast of Jakarta Reclamation INSTITUT TEKNOLOGI BANDUNG https://digilib.itb.ac.id/gdl/view/81173 Large-scale land development refers to development over a large area with high investment value from the public and private sectors realized in various land use changes. The involvement of actors with various interests in resource management and control of development impacts results in power dynamics in the land development process, where actors often use special powers to change institutional arrangements such as regulations and policies. As a result, there is an increasing complexity in development, leading to development results and impacts that deviate from the planned outcomes in both the development area and the broader urban space. In understanding the complex large-scale land development process, several approaches have been applied in developing theoretical frameworks and models drawing upon neoclassical economics, political economy, and institutionalism. Based on recent literature debates, there has been limited research to adequately explain the influence of changes in broader institutional structures and actor behavior related to power relations in determining large-scale land development processes. This research develops a theoretical framework from an institutionalism approach that is still not widely used, namely historical institutionalism and integrated with Steven Lukes' three-dimensional power relations theory to be applied to the context of land development. The research applied deductive approach by constructing a conceptual framework or hypothetical model to be tested on an empirical case based on the critical realism paradigm. Using a qualitative approach and a case study on North Coast of Jakarta Reclamation, analysis was carried out on secondary data related to plan documents, studyiv results, laws and regulations, policies, scientific articles, reports and news from popular media as well as primary data obtained through semi-structured interviews and observations. The results of this research are able to explain how actors use their power to design and change institutions, especially during times of crisis (exogenous change), and reciprocally how these institutions become long-lasting (path-dependent) and perpetuate exclusive power in land development large scale over time. Then, institutional changes that occur in the context of large-scale land development sites and broader structures are interconnected through power relations between different levels or spatial units because of the same land development actors who build networks of power and play key roles in these various levels. In addition, this research is able to look further into the dynamics of changes in individual interests, opportunistic behavior, and active use of power over time, which were not explained in previous research. In this case, not only exogenous changes, but also endogenous changes triggered by the opportunistic behavior of internal land development actors have a major influence on large-scale land development pathways. The strong and historically established power relations of almost three decades between developer groups and “elite” groups within the government structure have significance for the results and impacts on the development of the Jakarta North Coast Reclamation land and other urban spaces. text
institution Institut Teknologi Bandung
building Institut Teknologi Bandung Library
continent Asia
country Indonesia
Indonesia
content_provider Institut Teknologi Bandung
collection Digital ITB
language Indonesia
topic Perencanaan wilayah
spellingShingle Perencanaan wilayah
Arfida Paramita, Aulia
INSTITUTIONAL CHANGE AND POWER RELATION IN LARGE-SCALE LAND DEVELOPMENT: A CASE STUDY FROM THE NORTH COAST OF JAKARTA RECLAMATION
description Large-scale land development refers to development over a large area with high investment value from the public and private sectors realized in various land use changes. The involvement of actors with various interests in resource management and control of development impacts results in power dynamics in the land development process, where actors often use special powers to change institutional arrangements such as regulations and policies. As a result, there is an increasing complexity in development, leading to development results and impacts that deviate from the planned outcomes in both the development area and the broader urban space. In understanding the complex large-scale land development process, several approaches have been applied in developing theoretical frameworks and models drawing upon neoclassical economics, political economy, and institutionalism. Based on recent literature debates, there has been limited research to adequately explain the influence of changes in broader institutional structures and actor behavior related to power relations in determining large-scale land development processes. This research develops a theoretical framework from an institutionalism approach that is still not widely used, namely historical institutionalism and integrated with Steven Lukes' three-dimensional power relations theory to be applied to the context of land development. The research applied deductive approach by constructing a conceptual framework or hypothetical model to be tested on an empirical case based on the critical realism paradigm. Using a qualitative approach and a case study on North Coast of Jakarta Reclamation, analysis was carried out on secondary data related to plan documents, studyiv results, laws and regulations, policies, scientific articles, reports and news from popular media as well as primary data obtained through semi-structured interviews and observations. The results of this research are able to explain how actors use their power to design and change institutions, especially during times of crisis (exogenous change), and reciprocally how these institutions become long-lasting (path-dependent) and perpetuate exclusive power in land development large scale over time. Then, institutional changes that occur in the context of large-scale land development sites and broader structures are interconnected through power relations between different levels or spatial units because of the same land development actors who build networks of power and play key roles in these various levels. In addition, this research is able to look further into the dynamics of changes in individual interests, opportunistic behavior, and active use of power over time, which were not explained in previous research. In this case, not only exogenous changes, but also endogenous changes triggered by the opportunistic behavior of internal land development actors have a major influence on large-scale land development pathways. The strong and historically established power relations of almost three decades between developer groups and “elite” groups within the government structure have significance for the results and impacts on the development of the Jakarta North Coast Reclamation land and other urban spaces.
format Dissertations
author Arfida Paramita, Aulia
author_facet Arfida Paramita, Aulia
author_sort Arfida Paramita, Aulia
title INSTITUTIONAL CHANGE AND POWER RELATION IN LARGE-SCALE LAND DEVELOPMENT: A CASE STUDY FROM THE NORTH COAST OF JAKARTA RECLAMATION
title_short INSTITUTIONAL CHANGE AND POWER RELATION IN LARGE-SCALE LAND DEVELOPMENT: A CASE STUDY FROM THE NORTH COAST OF JAKARTA RECLAMATION
title_full INSTITUTIONAL CHANGE AND POWER RELATION IN LARGE-SCALE LAND DEVELOPMENT: A CASE STUDY FROM THE NORTH COAST OF JAKARTA RECLAMATION
title_fullStr INSTITUTIONAL CHANGE AND POWER RELATION IN LARGE-SCALE LAND DEVELOPMENT: A CASE STUDY FROM THE NORTH COAST OF JAKARTA RECLAMATION
title_full_unstemmed INSTITUTIONAL CHANGE AND POWER RELATION IN LARGE-SCALE LAND DEVELOPMENT: A CASE STUDY FROM THE NORTH COAST OF JAKARTA RECLAMATION
title_sort institutional change and power relation in large-scale land development: a case study from the north coast of jakarta reclamation
url https://digilib.itb.ac.id/gdl/view/81173
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