India's Greenfield Urban Future: The Politics of Land, Planning and Infrastructure
Contents: Preface. 1. Rescaling, Speculation and Governance on India’s Urban Frontier: Greenfield Development as Tabula Rasa/Loraine Kennedy and Ashima Sood. Part I: Imperatives: Corridors and Infrastructures. 2. Highway Urbanisation and Land Conflicts: The Challenges to Decentralisation in India/Sai Balakrishnan. 3. Scaling Up, Scaling Down: State Rescaling along the Delhi–Mumbai Industrial Corridor/Shriya Anand and Neha Sami. 4. Roads to New Urban Futures: Flexible Territorialisation in Peri-urban Kolkata and Hyderabad/Sudeshna Mitra. Part II: Dynamics: Land and Real Estate. 5. Dholera: The Emperor’s New City/Preeti Sampat. 6. Industrial Zone to New Skycity: The (Un)Making of India’s First Aerotropolis/Gopa Samanta and Akash Banerjee. Part III: Aftermaths: Political, Economic and Social. 7. New Town Building in the Postcolonial Era/Anna Dewaele. 8. The Rise of Private Governance in Bengaluru’s Electronics City/Mathew Idiculla. 9. The Politics of Urban Megaprojects in India: Income and Employment Linkages in Chennai’s IT Corridor/M. Vijayabaskar and M. Suresh Babu. 10. Making Sense of Place in Rajarhat New Town: The Village in the Urban and the Urban in the Village/Ratoola Kundu. Index.
City-building has been an enduring idiom of politics in India. Iconic capital cities such as Jaipur, Kolkata and Chandigarh, among others, have their origins in state initiatives, from precolonial times to the present.
In contemporary India, the impetus behind new cities has been reworked by the prominence of private real estate actors. One compelling and emblematic image of millennial urban transformation is the high-rise gated community. Promising high-quality infrastructure and ‘amenities’, aspirational lifestyles and sanitised vistas of work and leisure, these housing developments signal a decisive break from older ways of living in the Indian city. This discontinuity is also apparent in the geographic location of these enclaves, which are largely a feature of the peri-urban and ‘greenfield’ frontier areas—the Gurgaons and Greater Noidas, Navi Mumbais, Rajarhats, Whitefields and Cyberabads, Lavasas and Sri Citys.
Shaped by real-estate dynamics and policy-promoted growth agendas, especially around high-end services sector, greenfield urban development has brought with it economic and structural change. India’s Greenfield Urban Future explores this ‘urban frontier’ and the constellations of public–private interests underpinning it through ten essays by urban scholars who have remained deeply implicated in their respective field sites while engaging in debates within global urban studies. The themes are wide-ranging and varied: from struggles over land acquisition and real-estate dynamics to emerging forms of governance and place-making in these sites of township development.
Spanning diverse geographies across the country, from metropolitan hubs to industrial corridors, this collection offers a multifaceted understanding of greenfield urban development in India.
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Bibliographic information
Loraine Kennedy