Politics and the Urban Frontier
Oxford University Press (Verlag)
978-0-19-891638-3 (ISBN)
Despite the rise of global technocratic ideals of city-making, cities around the world are not merging into indistinguishable duplicates of one another. In fact, as the world urbanizes, urban formations remain diverse in their socioeconomic and spatial characteristics, with varying potential to foster economic development and social justice. In this book, Tom Goodfellow argues that these differences are primarily rooted in politics, and if we continue to view cities as economic and technological projects to be managed rather than terrains of political bargaining and contestation, the quest for better urban futures is doomed to fail. Dominant critical approaches to urban development tend to explain difference with reference to the variegated impacts of neoliberal regulatory institutions. This, however, neglects the multiple ways in which the wider politics of capital accumulation and distribution drive divergent forms of transformation in different urban places.
In order to unpack the politics that shapes differential urban development, this book focuses on East Africa as the global urban frontier: the least urbanized but fastest urbanizing region in the world. Drawing on a decade of research spanning three case study countries (Ethiopia, Rwanda, and Uganda), Politics and the Urban Frontier provides the first sustained, book-length comparative analysis of urban development trajectories in Eastern Africa and the political dynamics that underpin them. Through a focus on infrastructure investment, urban propertyscapes, street-level trading economies, and urban political protest, it offers a multi-scalar, historically-grounded, and interdisciplinary analysis of the urban transformations unfolding in the world's most dynamic crucible of urban change.
Tom Goodfellow is a Professor of Urban Studies and International Development at the University of Sheffield. His research focuses on the comparative political economy of urban development and change in Africa, particularly the politics of urban land and transportation, conflicts around infrastructure and housing, migration, and urban institutional change. His current and recent research has involved collaborations with a range of institutional partners including Addis Ababa University, Hawassa University, Makerere University, and Wits University. He is co-author of Cities and Development (Routledge 2016), sits on the Board of African Affairs, and is Treasurer of the IJURR Foundation.
Part I. Urban Tectonics
1: East Africa and the politics of late urbanization
2: Transformation and divergence: Explaining contemporary urban development trajectories
Part II. Urban Foundations
3: The making of urban territory
4: The making of urban economies
Part III. Urban Currents
5: New urban visions and the infrastructure boom
6: Urban propertyscapes
7: Working the city: Vendors, 'untouchables', and street fugitives
8: The politics of noise and silence: Negotiation, mobilization, refusal
Part IV. Conclusions
9: Politics and the urban frontier
Erscheinungsdatum | 09.05.2024 |
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Reihe/Serie | Critical Frontiers of Theory, Research, and Policy in International Development Studies |
Verlagsort | Oxford |
Sprache | englisch |
Maße | 156 x 234 mm |
Gewicht | 534 g |
Themenwelt | Wirtschaft ► Volkswirtschaftslehre ► Wirtschaftspolitik |
ISBN-10 | 0-19-891638-8 / 0198916388 |
ISBN-13 | 978-0-19-891638-3 / 9780198916383 |
Zustand | Neuware |
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