Abstrakt: |
In turn, three "ideal-type" modes of land management are proposed, differentiated along a spectrum from greater or lesser degrees of state control over land and state land manager autonomy: the political economy of the land grab, the political economy of occupancy urbanism, and the political economy of state capitalist urban planning. Unlike the Jakarta and Chongqing stories of strong central state power, Shatkin sees the Indian case as one of a bottom up process of neoliberalization, marked by a more pluralistic field of urban land politics and possibilities. [Extracted from the article] |