scholarly journals URBANISASI DAN PENGEMBANGAN KOTA DI INDONESIA

Populasi ◽  
2016 ◽  
Vol 10 (2) ◽  
Author(s):  
Prijono Tjiptoherijanto

Urbanization is not simply the phenomenon of a population problem, but is also a political, social, cultural, and economic phenomena. Study of urbanization patterns is important due to abundance reports which point out that rapid expansion of the population growth rate, living in big cities has increased enormously. The problems associated with exaggerated growth may create a primary city, that in its excessive process will have negative and disadvantage impacts for the development and the well-being of such a city.The omnipresent growth of slums, the underprivileged areas in the center and the outskirts of a city has provided a robust evidence that the proper plans at the heart of this, is paramount importance to the city development with regard to its inhabitants. Effective solutions to urbanization problems and to establish a relevant city development are to utilize effeciency in people empowerment as well as the equitable distribution of the public welfare, not just cosmetic and artificiality of the city development plan.

2021 ◽  
Vol 5 (1) ◽  
pp. 1-14
Author(s):  
Wiyoga Triharto

The need for burial land in the City of Banjarbaru is increasing along with the population growth every year. On the other hand, the availability of land for public cemeteries that does not increase is a problem. The way to overcome this problem is to develop a cemetery in a suitable new location. In achieving the objectives, the authors first collect and summarize primary and secondary data and conduct a literature review and applicable laws and regulations, followed by collecting data on the physical condition / environmental baseline. Second, determine the location of the public cemetery based on the land suitability score. The analysis on this target uses land suitability analysis using GIS. Third, analysis of population and mortality predictions. The analysis uses an analysis of the number of occupations and the size of the area. From the analysis, it is known that several new locations for burial development are still possible. Namely located in Sungai Tiung Village and Cempaka Village, Cempaka District and Gantung Manggis Village and East Landasan Ulin Village, Landasan Ulin District.   Keywords : Banjarbaru City, Development of Public Cemeteries, Location Determination Analysis min.


2019 ◽  
Vol 4 (3) ◽  
pp. 63-65
Author(s):  
Rachel A. Staniforth ◽  
Una Jennings ◽  
Jamie Henderson ◽  
Simon Mitchell

Serious violence and organized crime have been rising both nationally and in Sheffield, contributing significantly to increasing knife and gun crime, which results in threats to community safety and well-being. A multi-agency project with stakeholders across all levels of command and co- located operational staff was established to undertake collaborative activity that would protect the public by pursuing offenders as well as preparing for and preventing serious violence and organized crime: Fortify. Using a 4P approach, Fortify worked across professional and organizational boundaries to disrupt serious violence and organized crime. Relationships between partners have improved substantially through increased communication and understanding of the different roles, perspectives, and levers of each partner. A recent Home Office locality review applauded our partnership. Intelligence sharing has improved, leading to increased disruptive activity, including increased seizure of money, drugs, and firearms, as well as more arrests and safeguarding referrals. The number of mapped Organized Crime Groups (OCGs) operating across the city has reduced from 19 to 12. Processes and procedures have improved, reducing duplication and holding of information in silos. Community groups are more engaged, allowing us to address serious violence and organized crime in partnership. We propose to undertake action research with the involvement of all partners to provide more robust evaluation of our initial findings. We have found that collaboration between Police and Partners increases collective responsibility and facilitates success in tackling serious violence and organized crime.


Author(s):  
Robert Blobaum

This chapter looks at the Warsaw Citizens Committee, which emerged in August 1914 to assist in the basic provisioning of the city, finding work for the unemployed, assisting the families of military reservists called up to the Russian Army, and mobilizing financial resources to deal with the war's expected hardships. Those hardships, however, would be far greater than anticipated, leading to a rapid expansion of the committee's activities. Soon enough, the committee found itself involved in the organization of public kitchens, the sheltering of refugees, the setting of price controls, the monitoring of public health, and the protection of children. Eventually, with so many of Warsaw's inhabitants relying partially or completely on public support, escalating needs outstripped the city's financial resources. By the end of the war, a bankrupted city administration was unable to pay its own employees, let alone feed some two hundred thousand people in the public kitchens inherited from the Warsaw Citizens Committee.


2020 ◽  
Vol 23 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Isabel Cristina Castano-Isaza ◽  
María Arango-Ospina ◽  
Diana Cardenas-Villamizar

Sewage treatment is one of the great challenges in water management. In this regard, 80% of wastewater is discharged into water sources without any treatment, thus ignoring the fundamental right of access to water and sanitation and its implications for the well-being and development of populations. Colombia since the 50's began the strategy of improving water and sanitation. Seven decades of design and implementation of policies in favor of the expansion of coverage in aqueduct, sewerage and sanitation services, with significant advances for aqueduct and sewerage services and with great challenges facing the need to focus and optimize efforts to be more efficient and make the sanitation. The study and understanding of sustainable basic sanitation was carried out through the search for secondary information carried out in sectoral reports and research documents, where factors that positively or negatively affected the provision of the sanitation service were identified. On the other hand, the understanding of the social and political dynamics of the territory allows in the context of the city of Manizales to identify and analyze the perceptions from the three pillars of sustainability, natural environment, social environment and economic environment of two interest groups in the company Aguas de Manizales SA ESP, provider of the aqueduct and sewerage service in the city, through the application of a user survey and the carrying out of focus groups with institutions and community leaders. Lastly, solutions and strategies are proposed that eliminate causes or reduce the impacts that make it impossible to consolidate the public sanitation service or to maintain it over time.


2021 ◽  
pp. 69-77
Author(s):  
L. N. Konyagina ◽  
O. V. Ilyina

The article is devoted to the issues of the development of the personnel capacity of the public service on the example of the Moscow Department of Urban Development. The order of forming of personnel potential in executive bodies at the positions of the public civil service as well as the order of carrying out tender on replacement of the state positions are considered. The authors also pay their attention to the matters of drawing up and stage-by-stage promotion of the talent pool, applying for the replacement of the position of the public civil service of the city. The authors developed the recommendations on the development, advanced training of the personnel at the positions of the public service.


2021 ◽  
pp. 014473942199752
Author(s):  
Rochelle G Wessels

The Constitution of the Republic of South Africa states that public servants must deliver services to improve the general welfare of the citizens. The public servants therefore have a duty to the citizens to deliver effective and efficient public services that will be to the satisfaction of the citizens to improve their well-being. However, this is not the case since service delivery protests have become the norm, with citizens regularly protesting about the services received from the various municipalities. Citizens are not happy about the level of service delivery received and therefore take to the streets to render their unhappiness. The City of Tshwane Metropolitan Municipality is no exception, as service delivery protests have also plagued the municipality and during 2016, the media referred to the protests as Tshwane burning. The municipal frontline staff are at the coalface of service delivery and are often the only public servants that the citizens come into contact with. The municipal frontline staff deliver services to the public on a daily basis and should possess the necessary knowledge, skills, behaviours, attitudes and competencies to deliver professional services. This article will describe what the Customer Care Consultants think should be included in the design of an essential model for training and development for Customer Care Consultants at the City of Tshwane, as they are at the forefront of service delivery. It does so by drawing on an extensive case study using a qualitative questionnaire toexplore the views and perceptions of the municipal frontline staff. The article seeks to add to the body of knowledge by critically analysing the views provided by the Customer Care Consultants on the content for a training and development modelfor Customer Care Consultants at the City of Tshwane. This study reports on research undertaken for the author’s doctoral research conducted during 2018 and culminates in a training and development model for municipal frontline staff.


1995 ◽  
Author(s):  
Karen Figura Lange ◽  

Past urban planners, real estate speculators and myth makers have achieved the fantasy city of the future in Los Angeles. Based on the public dream of individualism and the desire for space, Los Angeles is a city inspired and created not by history but by future endeavors, speculative gestures, unlimited possibilities and fantasy. Rising from an agricultural village it has attained metropolis status through industries that promote and depend on myth; real estate development, tourism, film. Los Angeles has become the city it dreamed of being; a future city without historic connections and foundations. Without a sense of community, reality became image. The simultaneous development of the automobile and airplane fueled the growth and pattern of urban evolution in Los Angeles. Populated by individuals escaping their personal histories in the mid-west and east, Los Angeles became a city of newness with a civic lust for the new and a general acceptance that new is better. This lead to city development without historic precedent, and a reliance on technology, first the automobile and airplane, later the computer. In the end the city resembles suburbia infinitum, a city of nowhere, without a center, egalitarian and without hierarchy. Over this pragmatic patterning lies the concern for architects today; to work from within to create a sense of place without responding to the historical models, but developing an event from fragments, estrangement and loss of connectivity.


2020 ◽  
Vol 1 (15) ◽  
pp. 104-131
Author(s):  
Claudia Elena Robles Cardoso ◽  
Carlos Muñiz Díaz

Resumen: Las ciudades como catalizadores de derechos humanos han asumido la tarea fundamental de proveer el bienestar esencial para los ciudadanos. La responsabilidad de garantizar el derecho a la ciudad se ha abordado sin tomar en cuenta las diferentes necesidades que cada grupo poblacional requiere, en específico se ha omitido la perspectiva de género como un elemento fundamental para las políticas públicas de las ciudades, haremos un breve recorrido por la forma tan distinta en que hombres y mujeres viven las ciudades, así como las grandes deudas que requiere asumir el derecho a la ciudad.Palabras clave: Derecho a la Ciudad, Perspectiva de Género, Empoderamiento, Mujer, Seguridad y Movilidad. Abstract: Cities as catalysts for human rights have assumed the fundamental task of providing essential well-being for citizens. The responsibility of guaranteeing the right to the city has been addressed without taking into account the different needs that each population group requires, specifically the gender perspective has been omitted as a fundamental element for the public policies of the cities, we will take a brief tour because of the very different way in which men and women live in cities, as well as the large debts required to assume the right to the city.Keywords: Right to the City, Gender Perspective, Empowerment, Women, Security and Mobility.


2021 ◽  
Vol 2 (3) ◽  
Author(s):  
Nyabise Nelson ◽  
Niu Dongjie ◽  
Petro Mwamlima ◽  
Samson Mwitalemi

Dar es Salaam city, generates massive amount of Waste Electrical and Electronic Equipments (WEEE) that either ends up in the environment or kept at home or commercial areas. This study aimed at investigating the currenting WEEE management practices, assessing the level of public awareness on WEEE, and come up with the model that can predict the rate (%) of discarded WEEE. Both the qualitative and qualitative methods of data collection were used, that is the use of questionnaires, and interviews to EEE business people, repair technicians, public, recycling companies and the regulating authority. It was found out that Increase in WEEE within Dar es Salaam city is caused by growth of economic rate, population growth rate, household purchasing capacity, while the decrease of the waste is associated with recycling plans and exportation of the waste. Also, the public (76%) doesn’t consider the broken or expired EEE as waste, as a result they opt to keep them at home than giving them to recyclers or collectors. Even though there are recyclers within the city, they can only recycle 35% of the generated WEEE. If the current situation continues by 2026, about 68% of the generated WEEE will be discarded to the environment or at home or business places. The situation shall be rectified by promoting the WEEE recyclers.


Author(s):  
Norizam Bin Lagiman ◽  
Ibrahim Ngah ◽  
Ismail Mustari ◽  
Siti Norashikin Bashirun

City is the central development of the human civilization. The emergence of Islam as a greatest religion and most glorious began from the city. The aims of the study are to identify the concepts, principles and characteristics of wellbeing Islamic city and to establish indicators based on Islamic scholars opinion. It is also to measure the level of wellbeing city based on the indicators produced and to identify the implications of planning policy and urban community development. Result shows that, economic, faith and physical scored highest for developing cultural-economic indicators among the population endowment scored min 4.91. Faith-resident reading al-Quran as a daily practice indicator scored 4.90 and physical indicators of the existence of a clean environment scored min 4.89. Overall, the study found that the wellbeing of a city influenced by spiritual compared with physical factors.Keywords: Indicator, City, Development, Well Being, Urban Planning


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