[restabs alignment=”osc-tabs-left” responsive=”false”]
[restab title=”Land and Housing Economics” active=”active”]
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): 1-42 |
|
Porter, 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 |
.[/restab]
[restab title=”Urban Economics”]
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): 1-42 |
|
Porter, 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 |
.[/restab]
[restab title=”Regional Economics”]
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): 1-42 |
|
Porter, 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 |
.[/restab][/restabs]