Grounding the Green City in Phnom Penh, Cambodia Speaker: Dolorès Bertrais; Moderator: Samuel Chng.
Material type: FilmSeries: CKS Webinar: Public presentationPublication details: Center for Khmer Studies : January 11, 2023 3:00 pm (Cambodia time)Subject(s): Online resources: Summary: Abstract: The “smart” and “green” city is expected to replace polluted run-down cities. In Cambodia, these approaches are generally perceived by public and private actors as effective responses to problems exacerbated by rapid, poorly managed, and unplanned urban growth. In Phnom Penh, smart, sustainable and green city solutions are mobilized to turn the city into a “modern” Asian metropolis. The spread of smart, sustainable and green city models within regional metropolises such as Phnom Penh is evidence of the success of these new urban development models, which no longer seem to be reserved for globalized metropolises. While the literature on these new urban models abounds, secondary metropolises in the Global South remain sparsely covered, although some researchers consider that “the possibilities of sustainable, smarter, and greener cities can be achieved in developing Asian countries” (Shen and Fitriaty 2018, p.7). The spread of smart, sustainable, and green city models from Singapore to secondary metropolises in the Global South is a testament to the increasingly active participation of these urban spaces, which are peripheral to but form a key part of “global connections” (Myers 2021, p. 30). This research proposes to explore the ways in which these notions are anchored and disseminated beyond the all-encompassing discourses of the neoliberal city in Phnom Penh. It is based on fieldwork conducted between February and June 2021 and May to August 2022 in Phnom Penh, where semi-structured interviews were conducted with public actors at the municipal and ministerial levels, but also with urban planners, architects, private developers, and residents.Item type | Current library | Shelving location | Call number | URL | Status | Date due | Barcode |
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Video recordings | Center for Khmer Studies | Electronic Resources | Link to resource | Available | CKS23050031 |
Abstract: The “smart” and “green” city is expected to replace polluted run-down cities. In Cambodia, these approaches are generally perceived by public and private actors as effective responses to problems exacerbated by rapid, poorly managed, and unplanned urban growth. In Phnom Penh, smart, sustainable and green city solutions are mobilized to turn the city into a “modern” Asian metropolis.
The spread of smart, sustainable and green city models within regional metropolises such as Phnom Penh is evidence of the success of these new urban development models, which no longer seem to be reserved for globalized metropolises. While the literature on these new urban models abounds, secondary metropolises in the Global South remain sparsely covered, although some researchers consider that “the possibilities of sustainable, smarter, and greener cities can be achieved in developing Asian countries” (Shen and Fitriaty 2018, p.7). The spread of smart, sustainable, and green city models from Singapore to secondary metropolises in the Global South is a testament to the increasingly active participation of these urban spaces, which are peripheral to but form a key part of “global connections” (Myers 2021, p. 30). This research proposes to explore the ways in which these notions are anchored and disseminated beyond the all-encompassing discourses of the neoliberal city in Phnom Penh. It is based on fieldwork conducted between February and June 2021 and May to August 2022 in Phnom Penh, where semi-structured interviews were conducted with public actors at the municipal and ministerial levels, but also with urban planners, architects, private developers, and residents.
English