User:Peruan00/Climate change in Indonesia/Bibliography
Bibliography
As you gather the sources for your Wikipedia contribution, think about the following:
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Discussion
[edit]plan: I plan on editing the Sea Level Rise section of the article. Although is does a great job summarizing the issues, I think it may be an oversimplification. So I wanted to include information about land subsidence and how sea level rise in combination with the city itself sinking due to over extraction of ground water is causing issues. Also an inclusion of measures that may have exacerbated the issues and a quick update on Indonesia moving its capitol.
Comments on selecting sources: Hieup (talk) 02:38, 14 March 2022 (UTC)hieup
- All the sources you listed look great. Let's not use the last source (the news article). These sources all focus on the case of Jakarta. Since you will write about sea level rise, you can widen your search.
- I think you will need at least 1-2 sources that discuss an overview of the impact of sea level rise in the case of Indonesia or Java. For example: Triana, Karlina. "Sea Level Rise in Indonesia: The Drivers and the Combined Impacts from Land Subsidence." ASEAN Journal on Science and Technology for Development 37, no. 3 (2020): 115-121.[1] and Cao, Anh, Miguel Esteban, Ven Paolo Bruno Valenzuela, Motoharu Onuki, Hiroshi Takagi, Nguyen Danh Thao, and Nobuyuki Tsuchiya. "Future of Asian Deltaic Megacities under sea level rise and land subsidence: current adaptation pathways for Tokyo, Jakarta, Manila, and Ho Chi Minh City." Current Opinion in Environmental Sustainability 50 (2021): 87-97.
Next steps: 1) Expand your bibliography to include 1 or 2 more sources on sea level rise in general (like the above suggested sources). 2) Start to work on your Draft in your Sandbox Draft. Make sure you've carefully read the guide on your Sandbox Draft how to copy and paste materials in this sandbox.
Bibliography
[edit]- Colven, Emma. “Subterranean Infrastructures in a Sinking City: The Politics of Visibility in Jakarta.” Critical Asian Studies, vol. 52, no. 3, 2020, pp. 311–331., https://doi.org/10.1080/14672715.2020.1793210.[2]
- Talks about the governments stance or salience on climate change under the context of Jakarta's sea level rise. Most of the concern was due to the land subsidence
- Horman, Justin. (2020). Phenomenon of Sinking Jakarta from groundwater usage and other drivers that affect its implication Geographically, Social, Economically, and its Environment.[3]
- "Poor urban planning. Jakarta is not a walkable city; it has poor housing which includes lack of access to clean drinking water, poor sewage, and inconsistent electricity in certain part borough."
- Marianne, Priska. “The Land-Water Nexus in a Sinking City: The Case of Jakarta.” Columbia University, 2021.[4]
- The thesis covers how the Dutch colonial history colors a lot of the water infrastructure in Jakarta today and the clear, intentional, separation of class, which in today's context could help understand the lack of clean water in certain areas of the city, making locals resort to unlicensed extraction.
- Takagi, Hiroshi, et al. “People's Perception of Land Subsidence, Floods, and Their Connection: A Note Based on Recent Surveys in a Sinking Coastal Community in Jakarta.” Ocean & Coastal Management, Elsevier, 9 June 2021, https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/S0964569121002362.[5]
- Using this study/survey to underline while land subsidence is a primary cause of the flooding issue, a large portion of the local population do not know this information which does nothing about the continuing extraction of water which worsens the flooding.
- Lyons, Kate. “Why Is Indonesia Moving Its Capital City? Everything You Need to Know.” The Guardian, Guardian News and Media, 27 Aug. 2019, https://www.theguardian.com/world/2019/aug/27/why-is-indonesia-moving-its-capital-city-everything-you-need-to-know.[6]
- Although it's a news article, these events are extremely recent and have no studies on them as of yet. The news about Indonesia officially moving its capital from Jakarta to a city located in Kalimantan on the Island of Borneo represents the severity of the flooding occurring in Jakarta.
- "Indonesia passes law paving way to move capital to Borneo". The Japan Times. 2022-01-18. Retrieved 2022-03-23.[7]
- second article confirming capital move
- Triana, Karlina; Wahyudi, A'an Johan (2020-12-25). "Sea Level Rise in Indonesia: The Drivers and the Combined Impacts from Land Subsidence". ASEAN Journal on Science and Technology for Development. 37 (3). doi:10.29037/ajstd.627. ISSN 2224-9028.[8]
- Sea level rise around Indonesia and different effect from monsoons such as northwest monsoons having higher sea levels then southeast monsoons
References
[edit]- ^ Triana, Karlina; Wahyudi, A'an Johan (2020-12-25). "Sea Level Rise in Indonesia: The Drivers and the Combined Impacts from Land Subsidence". ASEAN Journal on Science and Technology for Development. 37 (3): 115–121–115–121. doi:10.29037/ajstd.627. ISSN 2224-9028.
- ^ Colven, Emma (2020-07-02). "Subterranean infrastructures in a sinking city: the politics of visibility in Jakarta". Critical Asian Studies. 52 (3): 311–331. doi:10.1080/14672715.2020.1793210. ISSN 1467-2715.
- ^ Horma, Justin. "Phenomenon of Sinking Jakarta from groundwater usage and other drivers that affect its implication Geographically, Social, Economically, and its Environment". ResearchGate.
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: CS1 maint: url-status (link) - ^ Priska., Marianne,. The Land-Water Nexus in a Sinking City : The Case of Jakarta. OCLC 1264355729.
{{cite book}}
: CS1 maint: extra punctuation (link) CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) - ^ Takagi, Hiroshi; Esteban, Miguel; Mikami, Takahito; Pratama, Munawir Bintang; Valenzuela, Ven Paolo Bruno; Avelino, John Erick (2021-10-01). "People's perception of land subsidence, floods, and their connection: A note based on recent surveys in a sinking coastal community in Jakarta". Ocean & Coastal Management. 211: 105753. doi:10.1016/j.ocecoaman.2021.105753. ISSN 0964-5691.
- ^ "Why is Indonesia moving its capital city? Everything you need to know". the Guardian. 2019-08-27. Retrieved 2022-03-12.
- ^ "Indonesia passes law paving way to move capital to Borneo". The Japan Times. 2022-01-18. Retrieved 2022-03-23.
- ^ Triana, Karlina; Wahyudi, A'an Johan (2020-12-25). "Sea Level Rise in Indonesia: The Drivers and the Combined Impacts from Land Subsidence". ASEAN Journal on Science and Technology for Development. 37 (3). doi:10.29037/ajstd.627. ISSN 2224-9028.