ABSTRACT

Urban planning on the five Lusophone African countries - Angola, Cape Verde, Guinea-Bissau, Mozambique, and Sao Tome and Príncipe - has so far been relatively overlooked in planning literature. Bringing together a team of leading scholars, this book fills the gap by providing an in-depth analysis of key issues in the history of urban planning and discussing the key challenges confronting contemporary urban planning in these countries. The book argues that urban planning is a non-neutral and non-value free kind of public action and, therefore, ideology, planning theories, urban models and the ideological role urban planning has played are some of the key issues addressed. For that reason, the practice of Urban Planning is also seen as the outcome of a complex interrelationship between structure and agency, with the role of key planers being examined in some of the chapters. The findings and insights presented by the contributing authors confirm previous research on urban planning in the colonial and postcolonial periods in Lusophone African countries and at the same time break fresh ground and offer additional insights as new evidence has been collected from archives and in fieldwork carried out by a new generation of researchers. In addition, it outlines possible directions for future research.

chapter 1|4 pages

Introduction

part I|119 pages

Colonial Urban Planning in Lusophone African Countries

chapter 2|22 pages

Colonial Urban Planning in Lusophone African Countries

A Comparison with Other Colonial Planning Cultures

chapter 4|14 pages

Empire, Image and Power During the Estado Novo Period

Colonial Urban Planning in Angola and Mozambique

chapter 6|14 pages

Modern Colonial

The Urban-Architectural Laboratory of Luanda

chapter 7|8 pages

The Prenda District in Luanda

Building on Top of the Colonial City

chapter 8|10 pages

The Growth of Lourenço Marques at the Turn of the Nineteenth Century

Urbanization, Environment and Sanitation

chapter 9|14 pages

A ‘High Degree of Civilization'

Colonial Urbanism and the ‘Civilizing Mission' in a Southern Mozambique District 1

part II|113 pages

Postcolonial Urban Planning in Lusophone African Countries

chapter 10|24 pages

Postcolonial Urban Planning in Lusophone African Countries

Spatial Planning Systems in Angola, Cape Verde and Mozambique

chapter 11|10 pages

Urban Planning in Angola in the Postcolonial Period

From Theory to Practice – A Critical Perspective 1

chapter 12|10 pages

Questioning the Urban Form

Maputo and Luanda

chapter 13|12 pages

Postcolonial Transformation of the City of Maputo

Its Urban Form as the Result of Physical Planning and Urban Self-Organization 1

chapter 14|20 pages

Mozambique's Rescaled Dualistic Urbanisation

Dealing with Historical Legacies of Imperialism and Resistance

chapter 15|12 pages

The Re-emergence of Urban Renewal in Maputo

The Importance and Scale of the Phenomenon in the Neoliberal Context

chapter 16|10 pages

Naming the Urban in Twentieth-Century Mozambique

Towards Spatial Histories of Aspiration and Violence 1

chapter 17|14 pages

Prepaid Electricity in Maputo, Mozambique

Challenges for African Urban Planning