Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Tables
- List of Figures
- List of Maps
- Acknowledgements
- List of Contributors
- Preface
- INTRODUCTION: The Regional Governance Reform in Indonesia, 1999–2004
- PART ONE MONITORING REPORTS & GENERAL ANALYSES
- 1 When the Burden is Shouldered Alone: Experiences in Autonomy at Regencies and Municipalities
- 2 Indonesia's Transition to Decentralized Governance: Evolution at the Local Level
- 3 Corruption and Decentralization
- 4 The Role and Function of the Regional People's Representative Council (DPRD): A Juridical Study
- 5 Regional Autonomy, Regulatory Reform, and the Business Climate
- 6 Decentralization, Regulatory Reform, and the Business Climate
- 7 Small Enterprises and Decentralization: Some Lessons from Java
- 8 Fiscal Decentralization and Its Impact on Regional Economic Development and Fiscal Sustainability
- 9 Origin and Development of the Urban Municipality in Indonesia
- PART TWO ANTHROPOLOGICAL ANALYSES OF REGIONAL CASES
- Index
- IIAS/ISEAS Series on Asia
9 - Origin and Development of the Urban Municipality in Indonesia
from PART ONE - MONITORING REPORTS & GENERAL ANALYSES
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 21 October 2015
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Tables
- List of Figures
- List of Maps
- Acknowledgements
- List of Contributors
- Preface
- INTRODUCTION: The Regional Governance Reform in Indonesia, 1999–2004
- PART ONE MONITORING REPORTS & GENERAL ANALYSES
- 1 When the Burden is Shouldered Alone: Experiences in Autonomy at Regencies and Municipalities
- 2 Indonesia's Transition to Decentralized Governance: Evolution at the Local Level
- 3 Corruption and Decentralization
- 4 The Role and Function of the Regional People's Representative Council (DPRD): A Juridical Study
- 5 Regional Autonomy, Regulatory Reform, and the Business Climate
- 6 Decentralization, Regulatory Reform, and the Business Climate
- 7 Small Enterprises and Decentralization: Some Lessons from Java
- 8 Fiscal Decentralization and Its Impact on Regional Economic Development and Fiscal Sustainability
- 9 Origin and Development of the Urban Municipality in Indonesia
- PART TWO ANTHROPOLOGICAL ANALYSES OF REGIONAL CASES
- Index
- IIAS/ISEAS Series on Asia
Summary
INTRODUCTION
The meaning attached to the city is placed centrally in the works of Castells. According to him, cities are liable to change because all sorts of parties are permanently struggling over the meaning the city should have. He defines “urban meaning” as “the structural performance assigned as a goal to cities in general (and to a particular city in the inter-urban division of labor) by the conflictive process between historical actors in a given society”. This article about the origin and development of the Indonesian municipality deals precisely with the meaning of urban attached to the Indonesian town by various categories of people at different levels over the years. This concerns a long-term process in which a lot of interests and goals have been at stake, such as financial cuts, administrative decentralization, the promotion of local interests, nation-building, security, repression, and the promotion of self-interests.
The Law of Decentralization was passed on 23 July 1903. It consisted of three articles, added to the governmental regulations of the Netherlands Indies, which empowered the establishment of local authorities. From 1905 onwards, urban municipalities (gemeenten) were created with Batavia, Meester Cornelis, and Buitenzorg taking the lead, followed soon by many others. Until then, the Netherlands Indies government had been dominated by the strongly centralized power of the governor-general. After the passing of the law, local interests could be represented at the local level.
The origin of this law could be characterized as a long Way of the Cross ending up with a jump into freedom. For more than half a century, local authority had been a topic of more or less intense contention between various persons, groups, and governmental bodies in which the discretion of the citizenry was at stake. It led to heated debate in parliament and other places as well as in the press, where not only were the pros and cons of the arguments fully explored, but also the modalities local authority might take.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Decentralization and Regional Autonomy in IndonesiaImplementation and Challenges, pp. 222 - 242Publisher: ISEAS–Yusof Ishak InstitutePrint publication year: 2009