Kampong

This term has also been used to refer to urban slum areas or enclosed developments and neighborhoods within towns and cities in Brunei, Indonesia, Malaysia, Singapore, Cambodia, Sri Lanka, and Christmas Island.

In Brunei, the term kampong (also kampung) primarily refers to the third- and lowest-level subdivisions below districts (Malay: daerah) and mukim (subdistricts).

Some kampong divisions are villages in a social sense as defined by anthropologists, while others may only serve for census and other administrative purposes.

[2] Both kampong and kampung are considered to be correct spellings, and both alternatives are common in written media and official place names.

The term kampong has been widely used in Cambodia, likely for thousands of years, to name places such as provinces, districts, communes and villages.

Based on the examples above, the meaning of kampong in Khmer can also arguably be defined as "an area or place located near a river or lake that people named as their own after they arrived, or formed their community at afterward."

In Indonesia, kampung generally refers to a hamlet, which is considered the opposite of the Indonesian kota ("city" in English).

"the Arts/Performances village") in various places across Indonesia where local artisans make and sell their crafts; and Kampung Batik (lit.

The British initiated the Kampung Baru ("New Village") program as an attempt to push Malays into urban life.

Malaysia's long-serving prime minister Mahathir Mohamad lauded urban lifestyles in his book The Malay Dilemma[8] and associated kampong village life with backward traditionalism.

Traditional houses and pond pavilion of Kampung Naga , a traditional Sundanese village in West Java , Indonesia .
Huts by a river
Riverside kampong on the road from Kuantan to Dungun in 1964