Thèse de doctorat en Géographie
Sous la direction de Michel Coquery.
Soutenue en 1986
à Paris 8 .
Alors que Singapour constitue, depuis sa creation en tant que comptoir colonial britannique (1819), une entite territoriale insulaire placee sous le signe du lib bre echange, on y assiste, depuis plus d'un quart de siecle,au deploiement d'un dispositif de planification de l'espace et d'encadrement de la societe a l'interieur duquel l'amenagement urbain et la politique du logement tendent a occuper u ne position preponderante. L'objet de cette recherche est de montrer dans quelles conditions et sous quels effets se realise cette mise en adequation peu commune entre le statut actuel de singapour- petite cite-etat florissante que sa position privilegiee dans les echanges internationaux semble vouer a l'"extraversion economique" et cette emprise d'une politique urbaine expressement volontariste. Sa singularite meme, Singapour constitue un idealtype de l'intervention urbanist ique moderne, l'investigation presentee se donne comme element de reflexion sur la fondation urbaine contemporaine. Cette investigation traverse les diverses phases de la formation urbaine singapouriensous l'aspect des morphologies urbaines et des espaces sociaux propres a la societe pluri-ethnique(chinois, malais, indo- les in-forme. A travers l'examen des formes institutionnelles de la planificatio urbaine et des enjeux auxquels repondentses divers volets d'intervention (villes nouvelles, renovation urbaine, amenagements industriels), la presente recherche s'attache a mettre en evidence les effets de rupture sur lesquels s'elabore l'ur planifiee; une attention particuliere est ici portee a la question de l'expropri consideree comme processus de decloisonnement autoritaire des communautes ethniq et d'annulation de l'espace politique dans le contexte de l'instauration d'un et national. L'examen du cas singapourien impose ainsi de reconsiderer les postulat theoriques relatifs aux articulations entre urbanisation planifiee et croissance economique industrielle; il ouvre egalement a une reflexion sur les representations du politique a l'oeuvre dans la fondation urbaine moderne
Singapore : the urban foundation experiment of a modern city-state
Since its very beginning as a british colonial settlement (1819) the Singapore urban system has been relying upon free-trade. Notwithstanding this, the singapo territory - now one of the southeast asian newly industrialized countries and on of the world's largest sea-ports -is markedly exposed, since more than twenty fi years, to the impact of comprehensive physical planning and social state control the rationale of this study is to show under which specific conditions and const ts this prosperous insular city-state, benefiting from its strategic location in international trade and devoted to an "extraverted" economic system, has been de nitely submitted to the strong effects of statal urban planning and public housi policies. After investigating the main periods of the island's urbanization pro- cess and the specific features of urban morphology and social space in this plur society (chinese,malays,indo-pakistanis), the analysis focuses on the institutio dimensions and political issues of contemporary urban planning. This brings some evidence of the positive-or, at least, "concrete"-effects generated by implemen- ting new towns, urban redevelopment and industrial development policies, but of their disrupting effects as well. Particular emphasis is placed upon compulsory acquisition and eviction considered as the means of a systematic delocation proc greately reducing communal and political space, as a part of reshaping society o the behalf of nation-building. But beyond these local (i. E. National) issues rela ted to its political system, the "global city" of singapore is often referred to the "world laboratory" for public housing and new towns. The singapore urban pla ning experiment thus makes one reconsider the interrelation between planned urba zation and industrial growth; it also leads one to question the political and te nological concepts underlying the urban foundation principles prevailing in the contemporary world