Kasarinlan > Volume 35-36 > Gentrification and Segregation in the Process of Neoliberal Urbanization
Gentrification and Segregation in the Process of Neoliberal Urbanization in Malabon City, Metro Manila
NAOKI FUJIWARA
ABSTRACT
While the developers of urban real estate require new, previously underinvested, in-city frontiers such as informal land in order to grow their capital, national and local governments have to look for outlying “new frontiers” to establish resettlement sites in the provinces for the urban poor. This article explores the relationship between gentrification and segregation in the process of neoliberal urbanization in Metro Manila. First, as a case study, it examines the spatial reconfigurations of Malabon City by tracing its colonial past and subsequent growth of local industries. Second, it explicates how financial capitalism has restructured the contemporary urban space and its history in Malabon causing segregation through resettlement projects. Drawing on the remaking of urban space in Malabon and the resulting resettlement project, the article identifies the relationships that paved the way for Metro Manila to become a “world class” city as well as its limitations.
KEYWORDS
gentrification · segregation · resettlement · neoliberalism · Malabon
Segregation and Exclusion
Volume 35-36
Bureaucratic Authoritarianism to Democratic Governance: Philippine Bureaucracy's Governance Mechanisms for Engaging Civil Society in Urban Poor Social Housing
Volume 35-36
Gentrification and Segregation in the Process of Neoliberal Urbanization in Malabon City, Metro Manila
Naoki Fujiwara
Volume 35-36
The Political Economy of LGBTQ Tourism in Thailand
Volume 35-36
How Preserving Biodiversity Mitigates the Impacts of Small-scale Land Grab on Livelihoods and Agricultural Production in Central Java
Volume 35-36
Survival and Atrocity: Remembering the Japanese Occupation of the Province of Aklan, Philippines, 1942–45
Frances Anthea Redison
Volume 35-36

