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https://doi.org/10.14764/10.ASEAS-2016.1-7

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"Dry feet for all": flood management and chronic time in Semarang, Indonesia

[journal article]

Ley, Lukas

Abstract

"This article describes flood management in poor communities of Semarang, a second-tier city on the north coast of Central Java, Indonesia. Using ethnographic material from participant observation and interviews, the article argues that flood management upholds an ecological status quo - a socioecol... view more

"This article describes flood management in poor communities of Semarang, a second-tier city on the north coast of Central Java, Indonesia. Using ethnographic material from participant observation and interviews, the article argues that flood management upholds an ecological status quo - a socioecological system that perpetuates the potential of crisis and structures of vulnerability. While poor residents have developed coping mechanisms, such community efforts follow the logic of maintaining a precarious minimum of safety. Designed in 2009, Dutch-Indonesian anti-flood infrastructure (polder) is supposed to put an end to tidal flooding, locally called rob. As a short-term project, the polder promises to regulate water levels and improve the lives of local residents. While it wants to make flood control transparent and accountable to riverside communities, the project ultimately fails to escape the institutional logic of chronic crisis management. By investigating the temporality and politics of the polder project, this article aims at contributing empirical and theoretical insights to scholarship on socioecological conflicts and crisis." (author's abstract)... view less

Keywords
Indonesia; natural disaster; disaster control; environment crisis; crisis management (econ., pol.); developing country; Southeast Asia

Classification
Ecology, Environment
Sociology of Developing Countries, Developmental Sociology

Free Keywords
flood prevention; urban political ecology

Document language
English

Publication Year
2016

Page/Pages
p. 107-125

Journal
ASEAS - Austrian Journal of South-East Asian Studies, 9 (2016) 1

Issue topic
Political ecology and socio-ecological conflicts

ISSN
1999-253X

Status
Published Version; peer reviewed

Licence
Creative Commons - Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works


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© 2007 - 2025 Social Science Open Access Repository (SSOAR).
Based on DSpace, Copyright (c) 2002-2022, DuraSpace. All rights reserved.