Spatial and social resilience in Phnom Penh, Cambodia since 1979

Type Journal Article - South East Asia Research
Title Spatial and social resilience in Phnom Penh, Cambodia since 1979
Author(s)
Volume 20
Issue 2
Publication (Day/Month/Year) 2012
Page numbers 263-281
Abstract
This article assimilates the city of Phnom Penh into an open system
that has spread into the Mekong River flood plain with the backfilling of
tidelands and the building of successive dykes. The city’s hydraulic networks
were damaged by the major crisis suffered under the Khmer Rouge characterized
by a strong de-urbanization process. Since 1979, the progressive restoration
of institutions, in addition to ad hoc interventions in the city’s networks by
‘pioneer actors’, allowed vertical interactions in the city-system between
stakeholders and structures to redevelop, and also permitted horizontal interactions
between structures. Despite more recent crises, the city-system has proved
resilient and it maintains its dualistic kernel–margins structure.

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