ABSTRACT

Fundamental shifts have occurred in Southeast Asia’s cities since the decolonization process gained momentum in the mid-20th century. Accelerating rural-urban migration, an explosion in the population in informal employment, the growth in informal settlements and the expansion of industry were significant. Beginning in the 1990s, a global knowledge economy began to attract attention (e.g. Castells 1991). Although its spread is uneven across the region, it has begun to bring about some small but interesting shifts in the way in which people live and work in urban Southeast Asia (Menkhof, Evers, Wah and Fong 2011; Asian Development Bank 2014a, 2014b). The pace and depth of change is highly uneven, being more evident in larger cities, and in those countries with advanced manufacturing and modern services oriented economies. Nevertheless, it challenges the way we conceptualize, theorize and think about Southeast Asia’s cities.