Retrospect of post-colonial metropolitan planning in India: Critical appraisal
Author(s) -
Karmakar Joy
Publication year - 2015
Publication title -
journal of geography and regional planning
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2070-1845
DOI - 10.5897/jgrp2015.0494
Subject(s) - metropolitan area , strategic planning , urban planning , neoliberalism (international relations) , economic growth , political science , population , plan (archaeology) , regional planning , geography , land use planning , real estate , colonialism , environmental planning , regional science , management , sociology , land use , economics , engineering , social science , civil engineering , archaeology , demography , law
Metropolitan planning after the six decades has evolved so much. Planning issues are not deviated from that much. Early urban planning was guided by their master plans. Four major metropolises of India namely Kolkata, Mumbai, Delhi and Chennai have formulated their master plans between mid sixties to late seventies. The paper tried to find out the evolution of the urban planning ideas from 1960s onward with respect to four Indian metropolises, to examine their planning strategy and understand if it is enough to solve the problem of the metropolises and lastly how neoliberal paradigm has shaped their strategy. It is apparent that each city masters plan failed to solve the problem. Population growth, land use strategy and housing problem remain the major issue. In the Early 90’s India steps in neoliberal approach and urban development organizations shifting their planning strategy from strategic to entrepreneurial deregulates the housing and real estate market. Key words: Strategic planning, entrepreneurial planning, neoliberalism.
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