The demise of the informal city? Economic growth and street work in urban Africa

New winds of economic growth are blowing across Sub-Saharan Africa. This is creating new urban ambitions involving the reworking of African cities, their economies, politics and spaces. However, as urban informalization continues to expand in the face of ‘jobless growth’ there are signs of intensified tensions as rationalities and practices of survival collide with rationalities of growth. Urban planning and regulation of central city areas increasingly adopt discursive, juridical and material technologies of control that seemingly seek to sanitize central city spaces of informality. Some scholars posit this as evidence that ‘revanchist urbanism heads South’. However, little is known about how seemingly global forces articulate with the specific local contexts of African cities. Drawing from theoretical insights from critical urban theory, the aim of this project is to shed light on the varied forces that are currently reworking central city areas in specific African cities and the strategies marginalised actors utilise to protect their claims to the street. Using qualitative ethnographic methods, the project focuses on contested urban spaces used by informal street vendors in Maputo, Kampala and Lagos to investigate three central research questions. Firstly, what are the new constellations of actors and interests driving the contemporary transformation of central city areas in specific cities? Secondly, what disciplinary technologies are being deployed to control actors and activities perceived as ‘illegitimate’ in central city areas and what conflicts emerge? Thirdly, how do people depending on the street for survival experience and respond to the re-making of central city areas? The 4-year project will include the following activities. Each of the three researchers will conduct a total of 6 months of fieldwork during years 1-4; project seminars in year 1; fieldwork analysis and writing of 6-8 peer reviewed articles and at least two popular scientific/policy orientated publications; presentations at 6 international conference, and, in year 4, a joint conference with collaborating partners from the three case study cities. The project will significantly add to current understandings of the mechanisms that act on informal processes of urbanization and also contribute to a regenerated theoretical consideration of the search for the ‘Just City’ in the African context. The project will also increase planning and policy-relevant understanding of the mechanisms and processes acting in the urban planning / governance / informality / nexus. The project team consists of three researchers, each working on one city - Ilda Lindell (project coordinator), Andrew Byerley and Onyanta Adama.

Project ID
SE-0-29-2015-03474_1-285-43082
Activity status
2 - Implementation
Aid type
D02 - Other technical assistance
% to Uganda
100.00

Organisations

Funding
Sweden
Implementing
Stockholms universitet
Extending
None

Disbursements by fiscal year, quarter

Fiscal year Fiscal quarter Value (USD) Uganda Value (USD)
2018 Q2 57,037.38 57,037.38
2017 Q2 76,050.08 76,050.08
2016 Q2 75,965.64 75,965.64

Commitments by fiscal year, quarter

Fiscal year Fiscal quarter Value (USD) Uganda Value (USD)
2015 Q3 227,896.92 227,896.92

MTEF projections by fiscal year

Fiscal year Value (USD) Uganda Value (USD)

CRS code %
Research/scientific institutions (43082) 100.0