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The Evolution of Squatter Settlements in Peninsular Malaysian Cities

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  07 April 2011

Extract

Squatter, and other vernacular, housing is found in almost all cities of Peninsular Malaysia. In 1976 such dwellings accounted for the majority of all residences in most urban areas, with squatter housing constituting over twenty per cent of the total in several cities. Squatter settlements are the most clearly defineable residential form outside of the modern sector and consequently their dimensions and history are better documented than others. These aspects of squatting provide the basis for this paper, by inference giving some insights into the evolution of all types of unconventional housing.

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Articles
Copyright
Copyright © The National University of Singapore 1981

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References

1 The term “vernacular” refers to an adapted form of traditional housing, often with some degree of institutional legitimacy, which is generally built in cities by artisans or small-scale construction firms. Squatter housing almost always involves extra-legal land occupation while vernacular housing tends to involve legal or quasi-legal tenure. Vernacular housing is more often built in accord with established building and planning regulations while squatter builders deliberately operate outside these regulations. Both squatter and vernacular forms are part of what I have called the unconventional housing sector because it has little or no contact with the modern institutions associated with the construction industry. It is unconventional in the sense that it is not based on the culturally artificial or formally imposed social standards of expatriate administrators or the local middle class and elites. (“Conventional” is defined by the concise Oxford Dictionary [6th ed. ] as “dependency on conventions, not natural, not spontaneous”. For a detailed discussion of these terms and how they fit into a model of the housing system, see Johnstone, M. A., “Access to Urban Housing in Peninsular Malaysia: Social and Spatial Distortions in a Peripheral Economy”, [Ph. D. thesis, Australian National University, 1979])Google Scholar.

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35 Sendut, Hamzah, “Patterns of Urbanisation in Malaya”, Journal of Tropical Geography 16 (1962): 114–30Google Scholar ; Sandhu, op. cit.; Gullick, J. M., Malaysia (London, 1969)Google Scholar.

36 For example, The Municipal Ordinance 1948, Local Authorities Ordinance 1950, Local Authorities Ordinance 1952, and The Straits Settlement Act (No. XXVII) 1957.

37 Ipoh Town Board, “Annual Report”, Report no. N. A. BK/A/MBI (Ipoh, 1954).

38 Ibid., p. 4.

39 McGee, “The Southeast Asian City”, p. 360.

40 National Operations Council, “Rehousing and Resettlement of Squatters to Kuala Lumpur”.

41 Ozman, Azizah bte, “The Squatter Problem in Kuala Lumpur, with Special Reference to Dato Keramat”, (B. A. academic exercise, Faculty of Economics and Administration, University of Malaya, Kuala Lumpur, 1970).Google Scholar

42 See , McGee, “The Southeast Asian City”; McGee, T. G., The Urbanization Process in the Third World (London, 1971)Google ScholarPubMed ; and Thong, Lee Boon, “Patterns of Urban Residential Segregation: The Case of Kuala Lumpur”, Journal of Tropical Geography 43 (1976): 4148Google Scholar.

43 Wehbring, “Squatters in the Federal Territory”.

44 This estimate is corroborated by data collected by several sources. See Kuala Lumpur Municipality, “Surveys of Squatter Settlements”, and Ministry of Finance, op. cit. In contrast Wehbring (“Squatters in the Federal Territory”) estimates a decrease of over 44, 000 between 1968 and 1974. This latter study, however, does not explain how this figure was derived or explain the decrease.

45 Narayanan, S., “Urban In-Migration and Urban Labour Absorption: A Study of Metropolitaelangor”, (M. Econ. thesis, University of Malaya, Kuala Lumpur, 1975).Google Scholar

46 Kuantan Town Council, “Unauthorised Buildings (Rumah Haram)”, unpublished records, #12a in File 117/A (Kuantan, 1970).Google Scholar

47 Commissioner of Lands and Mines, Kedah State, personal communication, Alor Setar, 1977.

48 Secretary, Kota Setar District and Town Council, personal communication, Alor Setar, 1977.

49 Kedah, State Secretariat, “Urban Squatters in Kedah”, draft report (Economic Planning Unit, Alor Setar, 1977).Google Scholar

50 Kedah, Department of Town and Country Planning, “An Analysis of Alor Setar's Squatter Population”, report, FileKl/1094/Pt. III (Alor Setar, 1972).Google Scholar