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Module name Land and Housing Economics Modul level, if applicable Master Code, if applicable TKP17-6-2-EP Subtitle, if applicable Ekonomi Lahan dan Perumahan Courses, if applicable – Semester(s) in which the module is taught 2 Person responsible for the module Doddy Aditya Iskandar, ST., MCP., Ph.D. Lecturer Doddy Aditya Iskandar, ST., MCP., Ph.D. Deva Fosterharoldas F Swasto Retno Widodo Dwi P, ST. MSc. Ph.D Language Indonesia, English Relation to curriculum Compulsory Subject Type of teaching, contract hours Lectures / SCL, PBL Workload 1 work credit or SKS is equal to 50 minutes of study activity in class. Credit points 2 SKS / 7.5 ECTS Requirements according to the examination regulations Minimum attendance is 75% of total classes Recommended prerequisites – Module objectives/intended learning outcomes Able to comprehend basic theories of land and housing economics Able to critique the conceptions of land and housing economics structure and its relation to development using spatial perspective Able to formulate an economic/financing scheme to solve land and housing economics problems Content This course provides knowledge and skills in spatial economics, specifically in land and housing economics. It will provide a spatial perspective in each economics analysis and examine how the process of interaction between environment spatial with economic activity The subject topics are:
Basic economic theory (Macroeconomic and Microeconomics) Poverty and regional disparity Land and Housing economics; Land economics, housing economics, informal sector. Study and examination requirements and forms of examination Written midterm, economics paper and final examination with open questions Media employed LCD, computer Reading list Grant, Ruth W. 2015. Rethinking the Ethics of Incentives. Journal of Economic Methodology 22 (3): 354-372. Parkin, Michael. 2016. Opportunity Cost: A reexamination. The Journal of Economic Education 47 (1): 12-22 Watts, Brad R. 2008. Understanding Opportunity Cost and the Economist’s View. A response to “the Economist’s Fallacy.” Journal of Multidisciplinary Evaluations 5. (10):89-92. Gandjour, Afschim. 2008. Is It Rational to Pursue Utilitarianism? Ethica; Perspective Journal of the European Ethics Networks 14(2):139-158 Hotelling, Harold. 1929. Stability in Competition. The Economic Journal 39 (153): 41-57 McCann, Philip. 1993. The Logistics-Cost Location-Production Problem. Journal of Regional Science 33 (4): 503-516 Mulligan, Gordon F. 1984. Agglomeration and Central Place Theory: A review of the
literature. International Regional Science Review 9 (1): 1-42Porter, Michael E. 1998. Clusters and the New Economics of Competition. Harvard Business Review November-December: 77-90 Berry, Brian J.L. & Okulicz-Kozaryn, Adam. 2011. The City Size Distribution Debate: Resolution for US urban regions and megalopolitan areas. Cities 29 (S1): S17-S23 Eaton, B. Curtis & Lipsey Richard G. 1982. An Economic Theory of Central Places. The Economic Journal 92 (365): 56-72 Giesen, Kristian & Sudekun, Jens. 2011. Zipf’s Law for Cities in the Regions and the Country. Journal of Economic Geography 11: 667-686 Kraus, Marvin. 2006. Monocentric Cities. Dalam Arnott, Richard J. & McMillen, Daniel P. eds. 2006. A Companion to Urban Economics. Blackwell Publishing Ltd. pp. 96-108. O’Kelly, Morton & Bryan, Deborah. 1996. Agricultural Location Theory: Von Thunen’s contribution to economic geography. Progress in Human Geography 20 (4): 457-475 Wagner, William B. 1974. An Empirical Test of Reilly’s Law of Retail Gravitation. Growth and Change 5 (3): 30-35 Dawkins, Casey J. 2003. Regional Development Theory: Conceptual foundations, classic works, and recent developments. Journal of Planning Literature 18 (2): 131-172. Martin, Ron & Sunley, Peter. 2011. Conceptualizing Cluster Evolution: Beyond the life cycle model? Regional Studies 45 (10): 1299-1318 Solow, Robert M. 1994. Perspectives on Growth Theory. The Journal of Economic Perspectives 8 (1): 45-54 Asra, Abuzar. 2000. Poverty and Inequality in Indonesia. Journal of the Asia Pacific Economy 5 (1-2): 91-111 Dartanto, Teguh & Nurkholis. 2013. The Determinants of Poverty Dynamics in Indonesia: evidence from panel data. Bulletin of Indonesian Economic Studies 49 (1): 6184 Mogstad, Magne, Langorgen, Audun & Aaberge, Rolf. 2007. Region-Specific versus Country-Specific Poverty Lines in Analysis of Poverty. The Journal of Economic Inequality 5 (1): 115-122 Savitch, H.V. 2002. What Is New About Globalisation and What Does It Portend for Cities? International Social Science Journal 54: 179-189 Pain, Kathy. The Strategic Planning Protagonist: Unveiling the global mega-city region. dalam Knowles, Richard D. & Rozenblat, Celine. eds. 2016. Sir Peter Hall: Pioneer in Regional Planning, Transport, and Urban Geography. SpringerBriefs on Pioneers in Science and Practice Vol. 52 Barca, Fabrizio, McCann, Philip & Rodriguez-Pose, Andres. 2012. The Case for Regional Development Intervention: Place-based versus place-neutral approaches. Journal of Regional Science 52 (1): 134-152 Marcuse, Peter. 1985. Gentrification, Abandonment, and Displacement: Connections, causes and policy responses in New York City. Journal of Urban and Contemporary Law 28 (1): 195-240 Blankart, Charles B. & Koester, Gerrit B. Political Economics versus Public Choice: Two views of political economy in competition Stark, Andrew. 2002. What Is the New Public Management? Journal of Public Administration Research and Theory 12 (1): 137-151 McCann, Philip. Modern Urban and Regional Economics, 2 editions. Oxford University Press: Oxford, UK .
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Module name Urban Economics Modul level, if applicable Master Code, if applicable TKP17-6-2-EK Subtitle, if applicable Ekonomi Kota Courses, if applicable – Semester(s) in which the module is taught 2 Person responsible for the module Doddy Aditya Iskandar, ST., MCP., Ph.D. Lecturer Doddy Aditya Iskandar, ST., MCP., Ph.D. Prof. Ir. Bakti Setiawan, MA., Ph.D. Language Indonesia, English Relation to curriculum Compulsory Subject Type of teaching, contract hours Lectures / SCL, PBL Workload 1 work credit or SKS is equal to 50 minutes of study activity in class. Credit points 2 SKS / 7.5 ECTS Requirements according to the examination regulations Minimum attendance is 75% of total classes Recommended prerequisites – Module objectives/intended learning outcomes Able to comprehend basic theories of urban economics Able to critique the conceptions of an urban economic structure and its relation to development using spatial perspective Able to formulate an economic/financing scheme to solve urban economic problems Content This course provides knowledge and skills in spatial economics, specifically in urban economics. It will provide a spatial perspective in each economics analysis and examine how the process of interaction between environment spatial with economic activity The subject topics are:
Basic economic theory (Macroeconomic and Microeconomics) Poverty and regional disparity Land Use and Transportation Study and examination requirements and forms of examination Written midterm, economics paper and final examination with open questions Media employed LCD, computer Reading list Grant, Ruth W. 2015. Rethinking the Ethics of Incentives. Journal of Economic Methodology 22 (3): 354-372. Parkin, Michael. 2016. Opportunity Cost: A reexamination. The Journal of Economic Education 47 (1): 12-22 Watts, Brad R. 2008. Understanding Opportunity Cost and the Economist’s View. A response to “the Economist’s Fallacy.” Journal of Multidisciplinary Evaluations 5. (10):89-92. Gandjour, Afschim. 2008. Is It Rational to Pursue Utilitarianism? Ethica; Perspective Journal of the European Ethics Networks 14(2):139-158 Hotelling, Harold. 1929. Stability in Competition. The Economic Journal 39 (153): 41-57 McCann, Philip. 1993. The Logistics-Cost Location-Production Problem. Journal of Regional Science 33 (4): 503-516 Mulligan, Gordon F. 1984. Agglomeration and Central Place Theory: A review of the
literature. International Regional Science Review 9 (1): 1-42Porter, Michael E. 1998. Clusters and the New Economics of Competition. Harvard Business Review November-December: 77-90 Berry, Brian J.L. & Okulicz-Kozaryn, Adam. 2011. The City Size Distribution Debate: Resolution for US urban regions and megalopolitan areas. Cities 29 (S1): S17-S23 Eaton, B. Curtis & Lipsey Richard G. 1982. An Economic Theory of Central Places. The Economic Journal 92 (365): 56-72 Giesen, Kristian & Sudekun, Jens. 2011. Zipf’s Law for Cities in the Regions and the Country. Journal of Economic Geography 11: 667-686 Kraus, Marvin. 2006. Monocentric Cities. Dalam Arnott, Richard J. & McMillen, Daniel P. eds. 2006. A Companion to Urban Economics. Blackwell Publishing Ltd. pp. 96-108. O’Kelly, Morton & Bryan, Deborah. 1996. Agricultural Location Theory: Von Thunen’s contribution to economic geography. Progress in Human Geography 20 (4): 457-475 Wagner, William B. 1974. An Empirical Test of Reilly’s Law of Retail Gravitation. Growth and Change 5 (3): 30-35 Dawkins, Casey J. 2003. Regional Development Theory: Conceptual foundations, classic works, and recent developments. Journal of Planning Literature 18 (2): 131-172. Martin, Ron & Sunley, Peter. 2011. Conceptualizing Cluster Evolution: Beyond the life cycle model? Regional Studies 45 (10): 1299-1318 Solow, Robert M. 1994. Perspectives on Growth Theory. The Journal of Economic Perspectives 8 (1): 45-54 Asra, Abuzar. 2000. Poverty and Inequality in Indonesia. Journal of the Asia Pacific Economy 5 (1-2): 91-111 Dartanto, Teguh & Nurkholis. 2013. The Determinants of Poverty Dynamics in Indonesia: evidence from panel data. Bulletin of Indonesian Economic Studies 49 (1): 6184 Mogstad, Magne, Langorgen, Audun & Aaberge, Rolf. 2007. Region-Specific versus Country-Specific Poverty Lines in Analysis of Poverty. The Journal of Economic Inequality 5 (1): 115-122 Savitch, H.V. 2002. What Is New About Globalisation and What Does It Portend for Cities? International Social Science Journal 54: 179-189 Pain, Kathy. The Strategic Planning Protagonist: Unveiling the global mega-city region. dalam Knowles, Richard D. & Rozenblat, Celine. eds. 2016. Sir Peter Hall: Pioneer in Regional Planning, Transport, and Urban Geography. SpringerBriefs on Pioneers in Science and Practice Vol. 52 Barca, Fabrizio, McCann, Philip & Rodriguez-Pose, Andres. 2012. The Case for Regional Development Intervention: Place-based versus place-neutral approaches. Journal of Regional Science 52 (1): 134-152 Marcuse, Peter. 1985. Gentrification, Abandonment, and Displacement: Connections, causes and policy responses in New York City. Journal of Urban and Contemporary Law 28 (1): 195-240 Blankart, Charles B. & Koester, Gerrit B. Political Economics versus Public Choice: Two views of political economy in competition Stark, Andrew. 2002. What Is the New Public Management? Journal of Public Administration Research and Theory 12 (1): 137-151 McCann, Philip. Modern Urban and Regional Economics, 2 editions. Oxford University Press: Oxford, UK .
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Module name Regional Economics Modul level, if applicable Master Code, if applicable TKP17-6-2-EW Subtitle, if applicable Ekonomi Wilayah Courses, if applicable – Semester(s) in which the module is taught 2 Person responsible for the module Doddy Aditya Iskandar, ST., MCP., Ph.D. Lecturer Doddy Aditya Iskandar, ST., MCP., Ph.D. Prof. Ir. Bakti Setiawan, MA., Ph.D. Language Indonesia, English Relation to curriculum Compulsory Subject Type of teaching, contract hours Lectures / SCL, PBL Workload 1 work credit or SKS is equal to 50 minutes of study activity in class. Credit points 2 SKS / 7.5 ECTS Requirements according to the examination regulations Minimum attendance is 75% of total classes Recommended prerequisites – Module objectives/intended learning outcomes Able to comprehend basic theories of regional economics Able to critique the conceptions of regional economics structure and its relation to development using spatial perspective Able to formulate an economic/financing scheme to solve regional economics problems Content This course provides knowledge and skills in spatial economics, specifically in regional economics. It will provide a spatial perspective in each economics analysis and examine how the process of interaction between environment spatial with economic activity The subject topics are:
Basic economic theory (Macroeconomic and Microeconomics) Poverty and regional disparity Regional economics; labour, regional growth, multiplier effect Study and examination requirements and forms of examination Written midterm, economics paper and final examination with open questions Media employed LCD, computer Reading list Grant, Ruth W. 2015. Rethinking the Ethics of Incentives. Journal of Economic Methodology 22 (3): 354-372. Parkin, Michael. 2016. Opportunity Cost: A reexamination. The Journal of Economic Education 47 (1): 12-22 Watts, Brad R. 2008. Understanding Opportunity Cost and the Economist’s View. A response to “the Economist’s Fallacy.” Journal of Multidisciplinary Evaluations 5. (10):89-92. Gandjour, Afschim. 2008. Is It Rational to Pursue Utilitarianism? Ethica; Perspective Journal of the European Ethics Networks 14(2):139-158 Hotelling, Harold. 1929. Stability in Competition. The Economic Journal 39 (153): 41-57 McCann, Philip. 1993. The Logistics-Cost Location-Production Problem. Journal of Regional Science 33 (4): 503-516 Mulligan, Gordon F. 1984. Agglomeration and Central Place Theory: A review of the
literature. International Regional Science Review 9 (1): 1-42Porter, Michael E. 1998. Clusters and the New Economics of Competition. Harvard Business Review November-December: 77-90 Berry, Brian J.L. & Okulicz-Kozaryn, Adam. 2011. The City Size Distribution Debate: Resolution for US urban regions and megalopolitan areas. Cities 29 (S1): S17-S23 Eaton, B. Curtis & Lipsey Richard G. 1982. An Economic Theory of Central Places. The Economic Journal 92 (365): 56-72 Giesen, Kristian & Sudekun, Jens. 2011. Zipf’s Law for Cities in the Regions and the Country. Journal of Economic Geography 11: 667-686 Kraus, Marvin. 2006. Monocentric Cities. Dalam Arnott, Richard J. & McMillen, Daniel P. eds. 2006. A Companion to Urban Economics. Blackwell Publishing Ltd. pp. 96-108. O’Kelly, Morton & Bryan, Deborah. 1996. Agricultural Location Theory: Von Thunen’s contribution to economic geography. Progress in Human Geography 20 (4): 457-475 Wagner, William B. 1974. An Empirical Test of Reilly’s Law of Retail Gravitation. Growth and Change 5 (3): 30-35 Dawkins, Casey J. 2003. Regional Development Theory: Conceptual foundations, classic works, and recent developments. Journal of Planning Literature 18 (2): 131-172. Martin, Ron & Sunley, Peter. 2011. Conceptualizing Cluster Evolution: Beyond the life cycle model? Regional Studies 45 (10): 1299-1318 Solow, Robert M. 1994. Perspectives on Growth Theory. The Journal of Economic Perspectives 8 (1): 45-54 Asra, Abuzar. 2000. Poverty and Inequality in Indonesia. Journal of the Asia Pacific Economy 5 (1-2): 91-111 Dartanto, Teguh & Nurkholis. 2013. The Determinants of Poverty Dynamics in Indonesia: evidence from panel data. Bulletin of Indonesian Economic Studies 49 (1): 6184 Mogstad, Magne, Langorgen, Audun & Aaberge, Rolf. 2007. Region-Specific versus Country-Specific Poverty Lines in Analysis of Poverty. The Journal of Economic Inequality 5 (1): 115-122 Savitch, H.V. 2002. What Is New About Globalisation and What Does It Portend for Cities? International Social Science Journal 54: 179-189 Pain, Kathy. The Strategic Planning Protagonist: Unveiling the global mega-city region. dalam Knowles, Richard D. & Rozenblat, Celine. eds. 2016. Sir Peter Hall: Pioneer in Regional Planning, Transport, and Urban Geography. SpringerBriefs on Pioneers in Science and Practice Vol. 52 Barca, Fabrizio, McCann, Philip & Rodriguez-Pose, Andres. 2012. The Case for Regional Development Intervention: Place-based versus place-neutral approaches. Journal of Regional Science 52 (1): 134-152 Marcuse, Peter. 1985. Gentrification, Abandonment, and Displacement: Connections, causes and policy responses in New York City. Journal of Urban and Contemporary Law 28 (1): 195-240 Blankart, Charles B. & Koester, Gerrit B. Political Economics versus Public Choice: Two views of political economy in competition Stark, Andrew. 2002. What Is the New Public Management? Journal of Public Administration Research and Theory 12 (1): 137-151 McCann, Philip. Modern Urban and Regional Economics, 2 editions. Oxford University Press: Oxford, UK .