River's End: The violence of indigenous riverine urbanization in the making of Indonesia's new capital

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Abstract

This article analyzes the consequences of the state-led urbanization of riverine indigenous communities in Indonesia. Specifically, we examine how the development of urban water infrastructure in the context of the new capital city construction in East Kalimantan has changed indigenous relations with the river, and how this change further led to reconfigure indigenous people's relationship with their cultural heritage. Engaging with the political ecology of urbanization, indigenous studies, and infrastructural violence scholarship, and based on qualitative fieldwork including semi-structured interviews and participant observation conducted in 2022, 2023, and 2024, we conceptualize the process of change as indigenous riverine urbanization and show how it turns both materially and symbolically violent. Materially, the modernist interventions in water and heritage infrastructure cause the loss of access to and coexistence with the river; and symbolically, they force the indigenous communities to accept new ways of living as a new ‘museum’. We argue that such multifaceted violence is produced through a universalized narrative of inclusivity in state-led public infrastructure projects, particularly in water provision and cultural preservation. The infrastructure projects work to sustain existing inequalities while also allowing indigenous communities to undertake a broader cultural recognition strategy. We recommend shifting from inclusion approaches focused on compensation and recognition toward a planning approach that involves indigenous peoples as planners, integrating their knowledge into urban infrastructure planning.
Original languageEnglish
Article number103555
JournalHabitat International
Volume165
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Nov 2025

Bibliographical note

Publisher Copyright:
© 2025 The Authors

Funding

This project, “Following Frontiers of the ‘Forest City’: Towards Sustainable and Inclusive Urbanization in Kalimantan and Beyond” is funded by NWO-Merian Fund grant number: 482.20.507 . We would like to extend our sincere gratitude to all the participants who generously shared their time, insights, and experiences during the fieldwork. We thank the three anonymous reviewers for their critical comments, which significantly strengthened this manuscript. We also thank Bosman Batubara for his input during the initial fieldwork in 2022, Agung Jauhari for creating the two figures included in this paper, and to all Forest City research consortium members.

FundersFunder number
NWO-Merian482.20.507

    Keywords

    • Indigenous
    • Infrastructure
    • New capital of Indonesia
    • River
    • Urbanization
    • Violence

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