Frontier density in urban India
本文通过印度东北部三座城市(迪马普尔、甘托克、因帕尔)的案例,分析了边疆地区城市化的三种核心密度动态:土地多重法律体系、边疆移民潮和军事化密度,对研究边疆城市化的学者有参考价值。
Urbanisation in India’s frontier regions challenges conventional understandings of the drivers, limits, and experiences of density. In this article I draw on cases from three cities in Northeast India, Dimapur (Nagaland), Gangtok (Sikkim) and Imphal (Manipur) to focus on three core dynamics of frontier density. First are the inter-legalities governing land, property and disputes. As urban areas expand into villages and other settlements, Indigenous, customary and pre-colonial (monarchical) norms and systems interact with municipal and state-level planning regimes shaping density pathways in particular urban zones. Second are the dynamics of frontier migration. During boom times property owners circumvent restrictions on sale and transfer of land to migrants by adding extra floors to existing dwellings to meet housing demands, creating enclaves of density, and vulnerability, in certain neighbourhoods. Third are military densities. Frontier cities in Northeast India have been shaped by their role in counterinsurgency through the last century. Dense nodes of military infrastructure sit behind high walls, while public space is surveilled to dilute density on the streets, and residents respond by thickening density in neighbourhoods for protection. I conclude by considering frontier cities as an urban type shaped by the mutually constitutive relationships between urban development and frontier space, bound up in continuing attempts to make legible, governable territory. Converging processes in frontier cities based on plural land regimes, migrant flows (both in and out), and militarisation shape density pathways and outline the concept of ‘frontier density’.