E-Book, Englisch, 242 Seiten, eBook
Rubin / Charlton / Klug Housing in African Cities
1. Auflage 2023
ISBN: 978-3-031-37408-1
Verlag: Springer International Publishing
Format: PDF
Kopierschutz: 1 - PDF Watermark
A Lens on Urban Governance
E-Book, Englisch, 242 Seiten, eBook
Reihe: Urban Perspectives from the Global South
ISBN: 978-3-031-37408-1
Verlag: Springer International Publishing
Format: PDF
Kopierschutz: 1 - PDF Watermark
Zielgruppe
Research
Autoren/Hrsg.
Weitere Infos & Material
Chapter 1: Reflecting on the housing lens and urban governance.- Section A: STATE AND COUNTER-STATE: DOMINANCE AND CONTESTATION.- Chapter 2: The quest to develop affordable housing: How Good Urban Governance depoliticizes the debate on housing affordability in Kigali, Rwanda.- Chapter 3: Interests and Contestation in Nairobi City Redevelopment and Housing Schemes.- Chapter 4: Are Social Movements achieving the Right to Adequate Housing in Lagos, Nigeria?.- Chapter 5: Becoming 'Unlawful': Homeownership, housing bureaucracy, and the production of precarity in Eastridge, Cape Town.- Chapter 6: Forced Evictions and the creation of the Lagos Mega-city.- SECTION B: STAKEHOLDER INTERFACES AND HYBRID ARRANGEMENTS.- Chapter 7: Navigating the ideological nexus between political and private interests: experiences on Inclusionary Housing from Cape Town.- Chapter 8: From Resistance to Reclamation: Insurgency in Khartoum’s housing governancepost the Sudanese revolution.- Chapter 9: Urban governance, authority and citizenship: the dynamics of local formal and informal governance of housing in Delft and Alexandra.- Chapter 10: Intermediation by necessity: The case of uMastand.- Section C: UNRESOLVED RESPONSIBILITIES.- Chapter 11: Housing delivery, local governance and co-operative government in Mangaung.- Chapter 12: Housing Governance in the Gauteng City-Region.- Chapter 13: ‘Complicit or collusion’ – Politics of Access to Land and Space in the Urban Housing sector in Harare City, Zimbabwe.- Chapter 14: Urban governance: balancing strong institutions and powerful actors in the provision of affordable housing in Lagos, Nigeria.-Chapter 15: A state of inconsistency: SA’s urban housing policy and practice.- Section D: OUTSIDE THE STATE: PRIVATE SECTOR AND NON-STATE ACTIONS AND THEIR OUTCOMES.- Chapter 16: Afterlives of Housing Cooperatives.- Chapter 17: What lies in between: self-built housing and the struggle to remain in place in Dar es Salaam.- Chapter 18: Emergence of Large-Scale Private Housing Estates and their Impact on Urban Governance and Morphology in Windhoek, Namibia.- Chapter 19: Social integration in the private sector driven housing developments in South Africa.- Chapter 20: Housing settlements in selected rural towns and townships in KwaZulu-Natal and their capacity to enhance the production activity of the economy.- Chapter 21: Turning Land into Stand: negotiating land transformations in developer-driven ‘affordable’ suburbs, Gauteng, South Africa.