ABSTRACT

This book calls for re-conceptualising urban recovery by exploring the intersection of reconstruction and displacement in volatile contexts in the Global South. It explores the spatial, social, artistic, and political conditions that promote urban recovery.

Reconstruction and displacement have often been studied independently as two different processes of physical recovery and human migration towards safety and shelter. It is hoped that by intersecting or even bridging reconstruction with displacement we can cross-fertilize and exploit both discourses to reach a greater understanding of the notion of urban recovery as a holistic and multi-layered process. This book brings multidisciplinary perspectives into conversation with each other to look beyond the conflict-related displacement and reconstruction and into the greater processes of crises and recovery. It uses empirical research to examine how trauma, crisis, and recovery overlap, coexist, collide and redefine each other. The core exploration of this edited collection is to understand how the oppositional framing of destruction versus reconstruction and place-making versus displacement can be disrupted; how displacement is spatialized; and how reconstruction is extended to the displaced people rebuilding their lives, environments, and memories in new locations. In the process, displacement is framed as agency, the displaced as social capital, post-conflict urban environments as archives, and reconstructions as socio-spatial practices.

With local and international insights from scholars across disciplines, this book will appeal to academics and students of urban studies, architecture, and social sciences, as well as those involved in the process of urban recovery.

part I|126 pages

Understanding systems and scales of governance

chapter 2|21 pages

Global Compacts or containment?

Geopolitics by design

chapter 4|25 pages

Spatial patterns, gray spacing, and planning policy implications

The urbanization of forced population 
displacement in Lebanon

chapter 5|18 pages

Governing displaced cities

Calibrating reconstruction amidst instability

chapter 6|31 pages

City Development Frame

The City as a unit of the countryside recovery (Azaz City in Syria)

part II|76 pages

Housing the displaced

chapter 7|27 pages

Understanding protracted displacement through the dwelling

The temporal injustice of the not quite, not yet solutions to refugee crises

chapter 8|21 pages

Learning to be a city

Emerging practices for housing the displaced in Bar Elias (Lebanon)

part III|128 pages

Conceiving of cultural heritage in the recovery process

chapter 10|23 pages

From recovery to resilience

Challenges and opportunities for post-crisis recovery of urban heritage

chapter 12|24 pages

The politics of urban recovery in a Soviet-era spa resort town

Heritage tourism and displaced communities in Tskaltubo, Georgia

chapter 13|25 pages

Creative institutionalism

Statecraft beyond the state in Palestine

chapter 14|23 pages

Souls of homes

Heritage as a manifestation of community relationships through space and time

part IV|68 pages

Space and imaginaries in framing post-crisis recovery(s)

chapter 15|32 pages

Transient city – steadfast camp

Re-construction of ancient Rome and present Dheisheh

chapter 16|21 pages

Urban recovery at the mall

Displacement and solace in Beirut's spaces of consumption

chapter 17|14 pages

Confiscated imaginaries

Notes on a work in progress