Fr. 236.00

Everyday Urban Practices in Africa - Disrupting Global Norms

English · Hardback

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Description

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This book disrupts the dominant underlying international norms informing urban development strategies across African cities. The book will interest practitioners, scholars and students of urban studies, development planning, urban governance, human settlements, development studies, and African studies.


List of contents

Foreword Preface 1: Introduction: Global Norms, Urban Africa, the Everyday, and Disruption Part I: Heterogeneity Section Introduction 2: Questioning the Urban-Centrism of the New Urban Agenda and Its Implications for African Cities 3: Disrupting the myth of cohesion-generating public space: Contrasting narratives from Johannesburg and Berlin 4: The hybridisation of public transport in Dar es Salaam and Nairobi: Challenging inscriptions of innovation policy in bus rapid transit systems Part II: Fluid Belongings Section Introduction 5: The Faulty Premise of “Leave No One Behind” in Lagos: A Focus on People Living with Disabilities 6: Living Among the Dead: Disrupting Narratives on the Inclusion of the Homeless Through a Case of Public Open Space in Johannesburg 7: Exploring the Potential of the Spatial Agency of Refugees and IDPs to Inform Alternative Approaches of “Protection”: Case Studies from Lagos and Berlin Part III: Persistence Section Introduction 8: Unsettling the Formal–Informal Binary: the Right to Development and Self-Determination in the Harry Gwala Settlement Trajectory in Ekurhuleni, South Africa 9: Policy Transfer and the Misplaced Enabling Role of Government in Nigeria’s Housing Policy 10: The SDG Monitoring Framework Turns a Blind Eye to the Daily Realities of Lived Tenure Security in African Hybrid Land Transaction Systems: A South African Case Part IV: Interplay Section Introduction 11: Local Government Autonomy, Electoral Systems and Their Implications for Social Contracts in Nigeria: An Overlooked Obstacle to SDG Implementation 12: When Borders Do Not Matter: Contextualising Socio-Developmental Challenges in Urbanised Nigeria–Benin Border Communities 13: Transport Infrastructure as a Driver of Sustainable (Urban) Development in Africa? Critical Reflections on The Interrelations Between Sustainability Agendas and Infrastructure-Led Development through Experiences from Ethiopia 14: Conclusion: Towards Realistic Global Frames That Embrace Everyday Urban Practices in Africa

About the author

Nadine Appelhans is Senior Researcher at the Habitat Unit, TU Berlin, Guest Researcher at the School of Architecture and Planning at the University of the Witwatersrand, and Scientific Coordinator of the Wits-TUB-UNILAG Urban Lab.
Carmel Rawhani is the Impact Evaluation, Research, and Learning Manager at Fairtrade International, working from Bonn, Germany, and contributing to the Wits-TUB-UNILAG Urban Lab as Research Fellow.
Marie Huchzermeyer is Professor in the School of Architecture and Planning at the University of the Witwatersrand, South Africa, and is Director of the Centre for Urbanism and Built Environment Studies in that school.
Basirat Oyalowo is a senior lecturer in Real Estate at the Oxford Brookes University. Previously, she was Senior Lecturer and WITS-TUB-UNILAG Urban Lab Post doctoral fellow at the University of Lagos, Nigeria.
Mfaniseni Fana Sihlongonyane is Professor of Development Planning and Urban Studies at the University of the Witwatersrand, School of Architecture and Planning.

Summary

This book disrupts the dominant underlying international norms informing urban development strategies across African cities. The book will interest practitioners, scholars and students of urban studies, development planning, urban governance, human settlements, development studies, and African studies.

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