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Ashok Kumar (2011)
Land in the Neoliberal Times: A Commodity or a Social Good?
Waquar Ahmed (2011)
Neoliberal Utopia and Urban Realities in DelhiACME: An International Journal for Critical Geographies, 10
B. Amable (2011)
Morals and politics in the ideology of neo-liberalismSocio-economic Review, 9
J. Chadchan, R. Shankar (2012)
An analysis of urban growth trends in the post-economic reforms period in IndiaInternational journal of sustainable built environment, 1
A. Kundu (1983)
Urbanisation in India: A Contrast with Western ExperienceSocial Scientist, 11
B. Goldfrank, A. Schrank (2009)
Municipal Neoliberalism and Municipal Socialism: Urban Political Economy in Latin AmericaInternational Journal of Urban and Regional Research, 33
Lakshmi Kantakumar, Nikhil Sawant, Shamita Kumar (2011)
Forecasting urban growth based on GIS, RS and SLEUTH model in Pune metropolitan areaInternational journal of Geomatics and Geosciences, 2
[Dramatic growth is witnessed by Indian cities after Independence and is similar to worldwide urbanization phenomenon. While many factors have influenced this rapid urban growth in India, scholars have proposed that neo-liberalist ideology; post-economic reforms in 1990s have evolved as major influencing factor. Studies have put forth that neo-liberalism has influenced economic growth of India, which opened different employment patterns, in several globally linked sectors located in and around the major cities. The current study investigates influence of this on urban transformation of Indian metropolitan cities. It purposes that neo-Liberalism has accelerated the growth of cities, impacting urban land cover, urban densities, functional performance of new buildings, urban economic structure and social interactions, opening new avenues like neighbourhood townships, IT cities and communication centres and other new development typologies are springing up. Thus, slowly and steadily moderating the cityscape, leading to expansion of urban areas into polycentric decentralized form and blurring of urban and rural borders. The study put forth that Indian cities are in a flux between effects of socialist ideology and neo-liberalist ideology.]
Published: Apr 28, 2018
Keywords: Socialism; Neo-liberalism; Urban transformation
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