ABSTRACT
This book disrupts the dominant underlying international norms informing urban development strategies across African cities. International policy frameworks have created a new universal agenda for developing cities. However, these frameworks have also imposed global paradigms and discourses that are often in conflict with local urbanisms. As we approach the deadline for achieving the Sustainable Development Goals, there is need for reflection and deliberation on a post-2030 agenda.
The authors identify powerful assumptions, norms, and positionalities that obfuscate the efforts to achieve sustainable development in African cities, as well as along the North–South divide. They argue that a disruptive critique of these normative concepts, grounded in the lived African urban everyday, opens up opportunities to dismantle their assumed neutrality. Through disruption, the authors critically re-interpret the meanings of policy and the praxis of local urbanism, ultimately challenging the logic of universalising concepts underpinning implementation in the current international policy system, and asserting the need for contextualised urban policies.
The book will be of interest to scholars and students of urban studies, development planning, urban governance, human settlements, development studies, urban geography, and African studies. It will also be useful for practitioners including town and regional/urban planners, urban policy consultants, and international development cooperation agencies.
The Open Access version of this book, available at https://www.taylorfrancis.com, has been made available under a Creative Commons Attribution-Non Commercial-No Derivatives (CC-BY-NC-ND) 4.0 license.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
part 1|53 pages
Heterogeneity
chapter 2|15 pages
Questioning the Urban-Centrism of the New Urban Agenda and Its Implications for African Cities
chapter 3|17 pages
Disrupting the Myth of Cohesion-Generating Public Space
chapter 4|17 pages
The Hybridisation of Public Transport in Dar es Salaam and Nairobi
part 2|57 pages
Fluid Belongings
chapter 5|18 pages
The Faulty Premise of “Leave No One Behind” in Lagos
chapter 6|16 pages
Living among the Dead
chapter 7|21 pages
Exploring the Potential of the Spatial Agency of Refugees and IDPs to Inform Alternative Approaches of “Protection”
part 3|56 pages
Persistence
chapter 8|18 pages
Unsettling the Formal–Informal Binary
chapter 9|17 pages
Policy Transfer and the Misplaced Enabling Role of Government in Nigeria's Housing Policy
chapter 10|17 pages
The SDG Monitoring Framework Turns a Blind Eye to the Daily Realities of Lived Tenure Security in African Hybrid Land Transaction Systems
part 4|63 pages
Interplay
