Locational components of urban and regional public policy in postwar Vietnam: The case of Ho Chi Minh city (Saigon) |
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Authors: | Michael H. Lang Dr. Barry Kolb |
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Affiliation: | 1. College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Urban Studies and Community Development, Rutgers University, Camden, 08102, Camden, New Jersey, USA
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Abstract: | Ho Chi Minh city is a primate city in which wartime dislocations have resulted in severely overcrowded conditions as well as a shrunken economic base. The new government has opted for a policy based on the rapid decanting of a large proportion of the urban population by encouraging internal migration to New Economic Zones in the hinterlands. This policy is based on a hierarchial administrative structure with agricultural productivity as its prime goal. A Green Belt policy has been articulated that uses the New Economic Zones as building blocks. The Green Belts constrain urban growth as well as provide foodstuff for the remaining urban residents. The ultimate objective of the overall policy is a balanced urban and regional environment that is in tune with Vietnam's agricultural economy. |
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