336 results on '"urban poor"'
Search Results
2. Urban displacement and placemaking in public space for wellbeing: a systematic review of global literature.
- Author
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te Lintelo, Dolf J H, Ip, Morgan Alexander, Lappi, Tiina Riitta, Lakshman, Rajith Weligamage Don, Hemmersam, Peter, Dar, Anandini, and Tervonen, Miika
- Subjects
CITIES & towns ,DEVELOPING countries ,WELL-being ,URBAN poor ,PUBLIC spaces - Abstract
Cities and towns are critical geographies of refuge for a globally unprecedented number of forcibly displaced people. Yet urban processes also expose these groups and the local urban poor to recurrent displacements. While such experiences are shared, studies often treat these populations as distinct. Drawing on Yiftachel's notion of displaceability, this paper systematically reviews and synthesizes a global literature on diversely displaced people's placemaking in urban public space. Observing a significant analytical gap regarding cities of the so-called global South, the paper identifies a heuristic, and key analytical dimensions shaping divergent access and uses of public space by variously displaced populations. These concern: temporal patterns; powerful meta-narratives of people and place; and complex multi-scalar and multi-actor configurations of regulatory regimes governing public space. Simultaneously, acquisition and deployment of urban knowledge and a practice of (in)visibility enable differentially displaced populations' everyday claims to public space for wellbeing. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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3. An Overlooked Phenomenon? Reflecting on Elite Housing Informality and its Potential Sustainability Implications.
- Author
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Azunre, Gideon Abagna
- Subjects
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SUSTAINABLE urban development , *URBAN geography , *URBAN poor , *URBAN studies , *SUBALTERN - Abstract
Urban informality is one of the most hotly debated concepts in the fields of geography and urban studies. However, one narrative that has assumed hegemony and dominated conventional scholarship is the view that it is peculiar to the urban poor or subaltern group. In this paper, I contend that little to no empirical attention has been paid to an essential piece of the conceptual mosaic of informality. I reflect on housing informality by elites or upper-income urbanites and highlight its associated Janus-faced governance approach. I argue that the deliberate disregard and legitimization of elite informal developments pose crucial sustainability implications. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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4. The Impact of Star Teacher Characteristics on Teacher Selection and Retention in Urban High Poverty Schools: A Qualitative Analysis.
- Author
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McKinney, Sueanne E., Ford, Deana J., and Tomovic, Cynthia
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TEACHER selection , *PSYCHOLOGY of teachers , *SCHOOL districts , *URBAN poor , *HIGH schools - Abstract
A qualitative content analysis was employed to examine what factors contributed to effective teachers' selection and retention in urban high poverty schools. First, the Star Teacher Interview was used to identify effective urban educators. Then, verbal interviews were conducted with star subjects to determine factors that contributed to their selection and decision to remain in urban high-poverty districts. An inductive analysis process revealed emerging and reoccurring themes. Four major factors were identified that influenced STAR teachers' decision to begin their career in an urban school district and/or Title I school: Giving back to the community, diversity, location, and autonomy. Three major factors were identified that influenced STAR teachers' decision to continue their career beyond 5 years in an urban school district and/or Title I school: Job satisfaction, effective with population, and perseverance. Implications of this study suggest that urban districts work closely with practicum and observation students from the universities who show promise in working with culturally diverse children. Providing teacher candidates with rich experiences in urban schools may positively impact their decision to work in urban settings. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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5. Resettled Refugees and African Americans in the Same Neighborhoods: Insights for Intergroup Dynamics and Multicultural Community Building.
- Author
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Lee, Wonhyung and Disney, Lindsey
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AFRICAN Americans , *NEIGHBORHOODS , *SOCIAL marginality , *URBAN poor , *REFUGEE children , *ADULTS , *PUBLIC spaces - Abstract
After resettlement, refugees are situated to navigate new environments and social relationships with nonrefugee residents in the United States. This study focuses on the intergroup dynamics between refugees and native African American residents with whom refugees often share spatial boundaries in urban neighborhoods. Based on 30 in-depth interviews in Albany, NY and Clarkson, GA, our findings suggest that both groups share the experiences of social marginalization and disadvantageous neighborhood factors. On the other hand, each group differed in their views on the police and the type of poverty that they deal with. Although two groups rarely collaborated, solidarity was deemed possible and desirable. Several suggestions for community building were made, including cross-cultural activities for youth and neighborhood activism for adults. Future research can examine the space-making and rights-seeking processes of resettled refugees in the context of urban poverty and in their relation to other locals. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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6. Zero Waste household practices in informal settlements: an opportunity to improve the living conditions of the urban poor and address global challenges.
- Author
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Muñoz Chavez, Anyi Milena, Cárdenas Cleves, Lina Marcela, and Marmolejo Rebellón, Luis Fernando
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LIVING conditions ,URBAN poor ,RURAL poor ,HOUSEHOLDS - Abstract
Zero Waste household practices adopted in informal settlements have facilitated the reduction of greenhouse gas emissions and contributed to income generation, food security and the strengthening of the social fabric. In four informal settlements in Santiago de Cali (Colombia), these practices were identified through participatory methodologies, and statistical tests of association between variables were used to determine possible causes of their implementation. These practices were found to be associated with characteristics of the residents including their connection to the cultural traditions of their places of origin, their resilience and solidarity, the satisfaction of their basic needs and their search for a healthy environment. This paper discusses these practices, the elements that drive them and their main benefits, highlighting the need for public policies to recognize their contributions in addressing global challenges and for future research to quantify their contributions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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7. Intra-Urban Distribution of Child Hawking in Southeast Nigeria.
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Taiwo, Amos Oluwole
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HAWKS , *RESIDENTIAL areas , *URBAN poor , *URBAN planning , *URBAN policy , *SOCIOECONOMIC factors , *CITIES & towns , *STREET children - Abstract
This article investigated the intra-urban distribution of child hawking in Enugu Municipality, Nigeria. The study first enumerated child hawkers across three residential areas (core, transition and sub-urban) simultaneously on different weekdays and at different locations (activity-nuclei) in Enugu municipality. A questionnaire was then employed to obtain information from 95 incidentally selected child hawkers, comprising 49, 21 and 25, respectively. Information sourced was their socio-economic characteristics and factors influencing their taking to the street to hawk. The data were analysed using percentages, cross tabulation and standard scores. Results showed that 58.9% were males, 53.7% were out-of-school and 47.4% realized ₦501.00–₦1000.00 ($1.4USD–$2.78USD) per day. Factors influencing child hawking, measured through an index tagged 'Child Hawkers' Factor Index' (CHFI) on a 5-point Likert-type scale, showed that poverty was the most prevalent factor in the core, transition and sub-urban areas of the municipality, respectively, with (CHFI = 3.67), (CHFI = 3.64) and (CHFI = 3.37). The study further showed that there was a relationship between child hawking incidence and land use activities. It observed that the core residential area, junction, Motor Park and market land uses were generators of child hawkers. The study suggested effective urban planning and policy measures in addressing the menace of child hawking. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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8. Effects of Open Space Characteristics on the Spatial Distribution of Street Children: Experience from Ibadan, Nigeria.
- Author
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Taiwo, Amos Oluwole, Odufuwa, Bashir Olufemi, Afon, Abel Omoniyi, and Oladesu, Johnson Olarinde
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STREET children , *OPEN spaces , *CHILD consumers , *URBAN poor , *PUBLIC education , *MOSQUES , *ECONOMIC activity , *SPECIES distribution - Abstract
Against the background of seemingly uncontrollable social menace and environmental nuisance of street children, this study examined the effects of open space characteristics on the spatial distribution of street children in Ibadan, Nigeria. With open space types in the city as spatial units of data collection, enumeration of street children was carried out in each space type within 7 weekdays in the morning, afternoon and evening. Observation was also conducted to know the socio-economic and physical characteristics of the urban environment attracting the children. The study, which employed z-scores to compare the intensity of street children incidence across the spatial units, confirmed that the incidence was a function of the uses to which open space types were put as well as the disorderliness of urban physical environment (indiscriminate parking, formal and informal economic activities, and so on). The most important open space types that attracted street children were markets, mosque premises and junctions. Although, incidence of street children was a daily affair in Ibadan, it was highly pronounced in the evening on Saturday, Friday and Monday. The study recommended development of policy measures for regulating the use of open spaces, and giving adequate planning attention to roundabouts, religious centres (mosques in particular) and markets in urban centres. It also recommended public education and enlightenment programme on the negative effects of street children incidence by all stakeholders, and that the aspect of culture of the people that encourages child begging and alms giving should be discouraged in its entirety. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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9. Potential Impact of the Insurance on Catastrophic Health Expenditures Among the Urban Poor Population in India.
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Singh, L. M., Siddhanta, Ankita, Singh, Ajay K., Prinja, Shankar, Sharma, Atul, Sikka, Himanshu, and Goswami, Latashree
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CHILDBIRTH ,HEALTH services accessibility ,CROSS-sectional method ,MEDICAL care costs ,CATASTROPHIC illness ,HEALTH insurance ,RESEARCH funding ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,HOSPITAL care ,DATA analysis software ,INSURANCE ,OUTPATIENT services in hospitals - Abstract
Background: Urban poor face a disproportionate burden of ill health and high out-of-pocket expenditure (OOPE), creating a severe unmet need for affordable and quality health care. This article highlights the impact of health insurance on OOPE and catastrophic healthcare expenditure among the urban poor of India. Methods: The study uses randomly collected household data from a baseline survey conducted in the states of Rajasthan and Uttar Pradesh. Separate Insurance impact models have been generated for the analysis. Results: Mean out-of-pocket health expenses is higher in the private health facility for the inpatient care but in case of outpatient care, the expenditure was more in public. Expenditure on medicine constitutes the largest part of the total OOPE. Insurance impact model shows that coverage on medicine alone can reduce medical impoverishment by 85% in the case of Outpatient Deparment (OPD) and 71% in the case of Inpatient Department (IPD). The urban poor preferred private facility for treatment in case of illness, albeit when it comes to delivery, they prefer public facility Conclusions: Study findings indicate overt reliance on private health care must be regulated, to reduce OOPE among the urban poor. Also, effective universal health insurance can go a long way in reducing the OOPE with availability of free medicines and diagnostics in the public health facilities. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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10. Growth and Development under Alternative Policy Regimes in India: A Political Economy Perspective.
- Author
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Ghosh, Madhusudan
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ECONOMIC policy , *GROSS domestic product , *INCOME inequality , *ECONOMIC expansion , *URBAN poor - Abstract
This paper reviews the economic policies adopted by the Indian government under different policy regimes, provides a political economy perspective of economic growth in the country during 1950–2020 and examines the inclusiveness of the rapid economic growth in recent decades. The growth performance of the economy improved as the economy moved from inward-looking policy regime to the regimes of pro-business and pro-market policies. India's political economy was supportive of the changes in policy regime. After growing at a sluggish rate during the first three decades after 1950–1951, the gross domestic product (GDP) growth accelerated significantly after the pro-business reforms in the 1980s, and there was further acceleration after the pro-market reforms since 1991–1992. It has, however, slowed down in recent years. Nevertheless, it has not been inclusive, as the benefits of growth have not reached all sections of the population and all regions of the country equally. On the contrary, disparities in income across regions and inequalities in income, wealth and consumption among individuals have exacerbated, and the problems of unemployment and poverty have been persisting in the economy. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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11. Contextualizing Collaborative Planning: Addressing Water Resilience in the Urban Poor Settlements of Ranchi.
- Author
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Mohan, Anjali Karol
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POOR communities ,MUNICIPAL water supply ,URBAN poor ,WATER security ,OCEAN zoning ,FOREGROUNDING - Abstract
The research embarks from the standpoint that unequal geographies of service delivery in the Southern city evidence differentiating practices embedded within dominant rational planning practices. It aligns and responds to the call of Southern urban theorists to develop alternative planning practices by anchoring within the socio- spatial specificities of Southern urbanisms. Foregrounding this objective, the research turns to the collaborative planning model and its pragmatic tradition of resisting the subjugating tendencies of instrumental rationality by admitting new ways of knowing and being from the life-world. Drawing upon a multi-actor collaboration that sought to address the circumstance of water insecurity in the urban poor settlements of Ranchi city, the research uses Healy's (1997) Forum, Arena and Courts as entry points to frame on-ground recursive and collaborative interventions. These include unpacking the context to frame and implement interventions that sought to enhance water security while operationalising supporting actions that aim to sustain the interventions. Within this framing, the paper draws upon the critiques of the collaborative planning model as standpoints for contextual reinterpretation to foreground a) the importance of empowering strategic actors at the bottom of socio-political hierarchies to lead the process; b) conceptualize consensus as a process rather than an end-point recognizing its intrinsic relationship with conflict; and, c) institutionalizing formalized yet flexible processes for consensus-building. Overall the paper argues that collaborative planning with its focus on the particularities of place and on the human capacity to invent, create, and transform presents a viable starting point for resisting the dominating confines of instrumental rationality in significant ways. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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12. The production of counter-space: Informal labour, social networks and the production of urban space in Dhaka.
- Author
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Lata, Lutfun Nahar
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PUBLIC spaces , *SOCIAL networks , *SOCIAL support , *URBAN sociology , *CITIES & towns , *STREET vendors - Abstract
Access to public space for earning livelihoods is important for street vendors in global south cities. However, due to continuous population growth and the demand for lands by the real estate development sector, pressure on land is very high in the global south. Consequently, global south cities such as Dhaka provide 'no place' for its poor migrant citizens. Yet, the urban poor are able to appropriate public space for livelihoods. Drawing on a case study of Sattola slum in Dhaka, this article investigates how the urban poor access to public space for livelihoods and construct counter-spaces by breaking the planned order of the city. This article argues that the urban poor are able to construct counter-spaces with the tacit support of translocal social networks as well as with the support of a range of state and non-state powerful actors who are compromised by the benefits and profits they extract from vendors. This article draws on qualitative data generated through in-depth interviews with 94 informal workers and 37 key informants. This article contributes to urban sociology literature demonstrating that the urban poor are able to construct counter-spaces drawing on a range of everyday tactics and appropriating public space by quietly breaking the planned order of the city. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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13. Narrating the crisis: Moral regulation, overlapping responsibilities and COVID-19 in Canada.
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Hier, Sean P
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URBAN poor , *CRISIS communication , *HISTORICAL sociology , *COVID-19 pandemic , *COVID-19 , *MEDICAL communication , *RURAL poor - Abstract
This article theorizes some of the ways that the COVID-19 health crisis was publicly narrated and morally regulated in Canada. Beginning with Valverde's theory of moral capital, public health crisis communication is conceptualized as dialectical claims-making activities aimed at maximizing the individual moral capital of citizens and the aggregate moral capital of nations. Valverde's historical sociology explains how moral capital operated in relation to economic capital accumulation in the context of 19th-century moral regulation of the urban poor. This article applies aspects of Valverde's historical framework about mixed economies of regulation to contemporary biopolitical moralization in the midst of a pandemic. It does so by arguing that responsibilizing citizens to flatten the epidemic curve of the disease contributed to the social construction of a normative pandemic subject. In this way, the analysis provides insights into how public health crisis communication explicitly intended to mitigate COVID-19 infection rates both reflected and reinforced the conjunctural norms associated with neoliberal governmentality. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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14. Property rights and household income among the urban poor in Luanda, Angola.
- Author
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Muyeba, Singumbe
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INCOME ,PROPERTY rights ,RURAL poor ,URBAN poor ,PROPENSITY score matching ,INFERENCE (Logic) - Abstract
The theory that property rights increase household income among low-income households is widely acknowledged, yet empirical studies find scarce evidence of this effect. These studies encounter theoretical deficiencies and methodological challenges of endogeneity and selection bias in making causal inference. This paper examines effects of property rights on income using a control group design and propensity score matching. It employs the continuum of property rights as a conceptual framework, applying it to the case of Zango I social housing project and Paraiso, a slum, in Luanda. Results show the likelihood that property rights increase tenure security and income through the mechanism of home business activities but not through labour market participation or credit access. In contexts where housing projects for low-income groups depend on the informal sector and are located far from city centres, home business activities can be an important mechanism through which property rights may alleviate poverty. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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15. Post-conflict statecraft, land governance and exclusion in Hargeisa, Somaliland.
- Author
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Tahir, Abdifatah Ismael
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COLONIES ,URBAN poor ,METROPOLITAN areas ,PEACEBUILDING ,ARCHIVAL research ,RURAL poor - Abstract
This paper explores urban land governance in Hargeisa as a critical site of Somaliland's post-conflict statecraft. Two key issues make this study imperative. First, the current research on Somaliland focuses on the central authority(1) with scant attention to the organization and functioning of the urban state and its effect for the urban poor, thus obscuring the importance of the conurbation as a site for statecraft. Second, Somaliland's post-conflict statecraft is marked by inconsistencies, previously unexplored. While the creation of the subnational state is characterized as bottom-up, with its origins in community-led peacebuilding, its governance practices are characterized by exclusionary top-down procedures imported from colonial and postcolonial periods. Based on interviews with key informants, archival research and document analysis, I historicize these layers of the state-building processes. I argue that the top-down approach of post-conflict land governance, a critical site of statecraft, marginalizes the disadvantaged by creating bureaucracies that favour the affluent. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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16. "Saving Trees, Land, and Boys": Juveniles, Environment, and "the Unfinished City".
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Sanders, Jeffrey C.
- Subjects
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AT-risk youth , *DOMESTIC economic assistance , *JUVENILE delinquency , *URBAN poor , *PUBLIC lands , *LAND reform , *TREES , *YOUTH movements - Abstract
This article examines juvenile delinquency, environment, and race in the War on Poverty's approach to urban poverty—especially in Los Angles—during the 1960s. It focuses on the role played by the Youth Conservation Corps program that sent "at-risk" youth into western public lands to be reformed and, ostensibly, to be trained as future breadwinners. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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17. Stakeholders' Perspectives on the Unmet Needs and Health Priorities of the Urban Poor in South-East Nigeria.
- Author
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Arize, Ifeyinwa, Ogbuabor, Daniel, Mbachu, Chinyere, Etiaba, Enyi, Uzochukwu, Benjamin, and Onwujekwe, Obinna
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HEALTH policy ,FOCUS groups ,HEALTH services accessibility ,STAKEHOLDER analysis ,ATTITUDES of medical personnel ,LABOR demand ,MEDICAL care costs ,QUALITATIVE research ,MEDICAL protocols ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,ACCESS to information ,ENDOWMENTS ,HEALTH planning ,MEDICAL needs assessment ,EVALUATION - Abstract
Relatively little is known about readiness of urban health systems to address health needs of the poor. This study explored stakeholders' perception of health needs and strategies for improving health of the urban poor using qualitative analysis. Focus group discussions (n = 5) were held with 26 stakeholders drawn from two Nigerian states during a workshop. Urban areas are characterised by double burden of diseases. Poor housing, lack of basic amenities, poverty, and poor access to information are determinants of health of the urban poor. Shortage of health workers, stock-out of medicines, high cost of care, lack of clinical practice guidelines, and dual practice constrain access to primary health services. An overarching strategy, that prioritises community-driven urban planning, health-in-all policies, structured linkages between informal and formal providers, financial protection schemes, and strengthening of primary health care system, is required to address health needs of the urban poor. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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18. From 'Bad Samaritans' to 'Bad Victims': A Political Economy of Africa-Nigeria Nexus of Poverty.
- Author
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Decker, Tunde
- Subjects
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SAMARITANS , *POVERTY , *VICTIMS , *URBAN poor - Abstract
This paper examines the linkages between moral categorisations on the international economic order and the dysfunctions that negate efforts at combating the Africa-Nigeria poverty conditions in the contemporary period. Drawing from the thesis of Ha-Joon Chang's 'Bad Samaritans', it analyses the contradictions in the often-repeated declarations on 'fight against poverty' in Nigeria and the endemic dysfunctions in leadership and institutions that ought to play significant roles in understanding and recalibrating the hegemonic influence of wealthy nations who control the global economy. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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19. Pandemic Micropolitics in Latin America: Small Business and the Governance of Crisis From Above and Below in El Salvador.
- Author
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Bull, Benedicte and Hoelscher, Kristian
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SMALL business ,PANDEMICS ,COVID-19 pandemic ,LEGITIMACY of governments ,CRISES ,URBAN poor ,FREEDOM of association - Abstract
The COVID-19 pandemic had severe impacts in Latin America, with small businesses intensely affected. Beyond its economic consequences, the pandemic also exacerbated structural flaws in some of the region's weakly institutionalised democracies, diminishing State legitimacy and expanding that of organised criminal groups. In considering how State governance from above is challenged by non-state governance from below, this article examines a "pandemic micropolitics" as seen through the lens of support to the small business sector. We outline a framework to understand co-governance in hybrid political orders during crises; and examine this using case studies of urban informal markets and the transport sector in El Salvador. In showing that the pandemic contributed to a renegotiation of co-governance between the State, criminal organisations, and business associations, we contribute to understandings of the dynamics of distributive politics and the co-governance of crisis; and the potential implications for a post-COVID-19 political economy in Latin America. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
- Full Text
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20. "Here We Go Again": Race and Redevelopment in Downtown Richmond, Virginia, 1977-Present.
- Author
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Chiles, Marvin T.
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URBAN planning , *INSTITUTIONAL racism , *ECONOMIC elites , *RACISM , *CENTRAL business districts , *MUNICIPAL services , *WORLD War II , *URBAN poor - Abstract
This article examines newspapers, archival collections, interviews, and personal papers to place Richmond, Virginia, at the center of the national debate about public–private revitalization projects. Since World War II, America's urban leaders, led by interracial coalitions of black politicians and white business elites, have used racial capitalism to promise that tax-funded redevelopment projects would enrich their cities, provide better public services, and reconcile the legacy of racist urban planning. Richmond's issues with Project One and the Sixth Street Marketplace in the 1980s, as well as recent issues with the Navy Hill Project, reveals the continuum of political and economic peril that comes with using such plans. Because urban revitalization is supremely profit-driven and shaped by the economic thinking that created disparate levels of white corporate wealth and black urban poverty, it is bound to exacerbate systemic racism. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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21. Service-Learning Exchange in Developed Cities: Dissonances and Civic Outcomes.
- Author
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Camus, Rina Marie, Lam, Cindy H. Y., Ngai, Grace, and Chan, Stephen C. F.
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SERVICE learning , *URBAN poor , *SOCIAL problems ,DEVELOPING countries ,DEVELOPED countries - Abstract
Background: The context of learning, which includes the host country, is an important variable of service-learning. Since international service-learning programs often take place in developing countries, studies about their impact and outcomes commonly draw from experiences in developing countries. Purpose: We investigate service-learning experience in developed, urban settings focusing on dissonances and civic outcomes, key areas of service-learning pedagogy. Methodology/Approach: This an instrumental case study based on a small group sample of 12 Asian student participants of a service-learning exchange to partner universities in the USA. Findings/Conclusions: Findings suggest that developed cities can be fertile grounds for impactful dissonances and civic learning. "First-world expectations" increased or intensified dissonances students experienced. Confronting urban poverty and other social issues in cities similar to their own led students to see domestic problems with fresh eyes. Implications: Service-learning exchange in developed cities can facilitate understanding social problems particularly in the way these occur in developed countries and promises transferability of learning. However, students need prompting to connect experiences overseas to home contexts and draw practical consequences. Faculty or staff assistance is necessary to help students constructively cope with powerful dissonances. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
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22. Exploring the impact of COVID-19 movement control orders on eating habits and physical activity in low-resource urban settings in Malaysia.
- Author
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Lim, Shiang Cheng, Kataria, Ishu, Ngongo, Carrie, Usek, Venessa Sambai, Kudtarkar, Shashank Rajkumar, Chandran, Arunah, and Mustapha, Feisul Idzwan
- Abstract
Background: The COVID-19 pandemic led Malaysia to introduce movement control orders (MCOs). While MCOs were intended to slow the spread of COVID-19, the effects of such measures on the noncommunicable disease (NCD) risk factors have not been fully explored. This exploratory study aimed to understand the effect of the MCO on the eating habits and physical activity levels of the urban poor in Malaysia as well as potential health promotion interventions during the COVID-19 pandemic. Methods: This rapid assessment used a mixed-method approach in three low-cost public flats in Kuala Lumpur targeting the B40, which is the bottom 40% of the economic spectrum. A total of 95 community members participated in a quantitative phone survey, while 21 respondents participated in a qualitative phone survey, including 12 community members and nine community health volunteers (CHVs). Results: The movement restriction imposed during the MCO significantly reduced the frequency and duration of respondents' physical activity. At the same time, respondents reported significantly increased consumption of home-cooked meals. More than half of respondents reduced their consumption of packaged snack foods (53.7%), street desserts (54.7%), fast food (50.5%), soft drinks (50.5%), and 3-in-1 or instant drinks (50.5%) due to limited access during the MCO. B40 communities were receptive to potential interventions to encourage healthier eating and physical activity leveraging digital approaches under the 'new normal'. Reported concerns included internet accessibility and affordability, functionality, and digital literacy. Conclusion: The COVID-19 pandemic requires innovation to address diseases and risk factors at the community level. While movement restrictions reduced physical activity, they created opportunities for low-income individuals to have greater control over their diet, enabling them to adopt healthier eating habits. Lifestyle changes experienced by vulnerable populations provide an opportunity for creative and technology-enabled interventions to promote healthy eating and exercise. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
- Full Text
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23. Toward an Empirical Analysis of Income and Time Poverty in Urban China.
- Author
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Wang, Wei
- Subjects
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INCOME , *URBAN poor , *POVERTY , *FREE enterprise , *LOGISTIC regression analysis , *ACADEMIC achievement - Abstract
Many earlier studies have assessed Chinese poverty using monetary dimensions, but few have considered the time dimension. This research investigates multidimensional poverty in urban China, using data from the 2013 China Household Income Project, from the standpoints of income and time. A logistic regression model was used to estimate the socioeconomic causes of income poverty, time poverty, and income–constrained time poverty. Empirical results obtained from this study reveal that being a paid female worker or a private enterprise employee and bearing the financial burdens of housing and medical care have significant effects on the probability of being time poor. In addition, workers who have low academic achievement, children, and educational loans are particularly prone to suffering income–constrained time poverty. This study contributes to the assessment of severe poverty situations and suggests an increasing need for working time regulations and more support for less-educated workers in urban China. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
- Full Text
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24. Shadow care infrastructures: Sustaining life in post-welfare cities.
- Author
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Power, Emma R, Wiesel, Ilan, Mitchell, Emma, and Mee, Kathleen J
- Subjects
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BLACK market , *PUBLIC welfare , *URBAN life , *NONPROFIT sector , *URBAN poor - Abstract
Economic restructuring and welfare reform are driving new forms of urban poverty in the global north. Shadow care infrastructures is a new frame for conceptualising the complex and interconnected practices through which marginalised people seek survival in this context. It remaps welfare landscapes across a continuum that includes formal and informal, established and improvised practice, the not-for-profit sector, informal community networks and exchange and the black market. Conceptually, it centres the care practices that sustain life and the infrastructures that sustain them. Activating a 'shadow geographies' tradition it foregrounds care infrastructures that are necessary, but rarely visible within, welfare discourse. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
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25. How does clientelism foster electoral dominance? Evidence from Turkey.
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Arslantaş, Düzgün and Arslantaş, Şenol
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PATRONAGE ,SOCIAL dominance ,ELECTIONS - Abstract
This article reveals how the AKP's use of clientelism contributes to its electoral dominance. It does so by examining the features and actors as well as the structure of the clientelist network. The arguments are based on fieldwork in one of the poorest and most densely populated districts of Bağcılar, where in the 2015 legislative elections the AKP achieved more votes than in any other district in Istanbul. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
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26. Perceptions of atmosphere: Air, waste, and narratives of life and work in Mumbai.
- Author
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Tripathy, Priyam and McFarlane, Colin
- Subjects
- *
ATMOSPHERE , *SOCIAL anxiety , *WATER pollution , *SMELL , *URBAN poor , *SOCIAL history , *URBAN health - Abstract
How do residents on the socioeconomic margins of the city experience and perceive atmosphere? How does the concept of atmosphere change when we write it from a context of impoverished and stigmatized residents? Drawing on research in neighborhoods near Mumbai's largest garbage ground, Deonar, we seek to advance a growing body of work on urban atmosphere. We examine how atmosphere operates materially and affectively through different and changing relations between air, waste, work, environment, and social conditions. The accounts from residents revolve around a set of recurring issues – health, smell, fire, and stagnant and contaminated water – through which different perceptions of atmosphere take shape. This reading both informs the pluralization and extension of understandings of atmosphere, from questions of health and bodily damage to social anxieties linked to stigma, and reveals atmosphere as an index of poverty and inequality. We argue for the value of a research focus on "perceptions of atmosphere" as part of a situated geography of atmosphere on the margins, and as a basis for understanding urban poverty, inequalities, and politics. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. Coverage of Maternal & Child Health Services by the Beneficiaries Residing in an Urban Poor Locality, Bengaluru.
- Author
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Hanumanthaiah, Ashwath N. Doddabele, Lakshmi, Hulugappa, Ramya, Manchegowda, and Anwith, Huluvadi Shivalingaiah
- Abstract
Introduction: Under the National Population Policy-2000, National Health Policy-2002, 10th Five-Year Plan, and Reproductive and Child Health-2 Programme, the maternal and child health (MCH) services of the urban poor have been recognized as an important thrust area for the country's development. Objective: The objective is to assess the MCH services coverage and utilization provided by the government. Methods: A cross-sectional study was conducted during October 2015-November 2016 in the eight urban poor localities falling under the urban field practice area of the medical college in Bengaluru. Using the probability proportional to population size, a total of 2540 beneficiaries meeting the inclusion and exclusion criteria were included in the study. Data were collected using pretested semistructured pro forma by interview method and analyzed using appropriate inferential and descriptive statistics. Results: Around 83.3% of subjects had registered their pregnancy within 12 weeks. Majority (83.1%) of women delivered in the government hospital and 7.2% had complications following delivery. Around 56.8% of women had practiced one of the family planning methods (couple protection rate of 56.8%). Most of the women 67% had utilized MCH services in the past 6 months and 74.5% utilized services from the government health facility. The utilization of MCH services was mainly by subjects of the Muslim religion, nuclear families, literates, and unemployed and on applying Z-test this difference was statistically significant. Conclusion: Coverage of MCH services was not satisfactory. There is a statistically significant difference in the utilization based on religion, type of family, literacy, and employment. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. Struggle, Urban Appropriation, and Cities of the Future.
- Author
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Jensen, Jill
- Subjects
- *
PUBLIC spaces , *URBANIZATION , *URBAN poor , *CITY dwellers , *SOCIAL conflict , *STRUGGLE , *FRENCH Third Republic - Abstract
Keywords: right to the city; urban appropriation; capitalism; identity; class struggle EN right to the city urban appropriation capitalism identity class struggle 697 702 6 04/12/22 20220501 NES 220501 Kohn, Margaret (2016). As a serious critique from the Left, rights within the liberal state are contradictory in that they seem to give to the people but reinforce a state's mechanism of domination. Kohn provides an excellent summary for this essay on struggle and appropriation in light its evaluation of "the public", of democracy and deliberation, and the strengths but also the shortcoming of rights' claims. "Lefebvre argued that the power to make urban spaces, which he viewed as the control points of modern capitalism", writes Herod, "must be wrested from capital and the state and located instead in the hands of the working-class people" (Herod, p. 197). [Extracted from the article]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. Formation of Informal Settlements and the Development of the Idiom Teneke Mahalle in the Late-Ottoman Istanbul.
- Author
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Yılgür, Egemen
- Subjects
- *
HUMAN settlements , *NINETEENTH century , *IDIOMS , *SLUMS , *URBAN poor , *REFUGEES , *CIVIL society - Abstract
A teneke mahalle, mostly consisting of shacks constructed of collected waste materials, is a late Ottoman and early Republican phenomenon that parallels its global counterparts such as the Corralone s in Peru or the Indian slums. Although occasionally mentioned in the pioneer studies, the long history of the teneke mahalle s has been overlooked until recent times, and in the mainstream discussions on urban poverty, these neighborhoods have almost wholly been invisible. However, informal settlements came to the agenda of the state and society, right after the massive eviction in 1883 of the refugees of the War of 1877-1878 from the free temporary settlements. They created teneke mahalle s, and over time, the local poor also adopted their creative solution for cheap and relatively safe housing. Drawing on both archival and oral records, the author establishes the actual presence of the category and traces the development of the idiom in the late nineteenth century. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. Rich cities, poor countryside? Social structure of the poor and poverty risks in urban and rural places in an affluent country.
- Author
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Hümbelin, Oliver, Hobi, Lukas, and Fluder, Robert
- Subjects
SOCIAL structure ,POOR people ,URBAN poor ,SINGLE parents ,RANDOM forest algorithms ,RURAL education ,RURAL schools - Abstract
This paper contributes to the field of regional poverty literature by using linked tax data to examine poverty in a large district in Switzerland with one million inhabitants and rural and urban parts. We measure poverty using income and asset-based approaches. Our regional comparison of the social structure of the poor shows that poor people in rural areas are more likely to be of retirement age. Among the workforce, the share of poor is larger for those who work in agriculture compared to those working in industry or the service sector. In urban areas, the poor are more often freelancers and people of foreign origin. Despite where they live, people with little education, single parents, and people working in gastronomy/tourism are disproportionately often poor. We then use a random forest based variable importance assessment to clarify whether the importance of poverty risks factors differs in urban and rural locations. It shows little regional differences among the major poverty risk factors, and it demonstrates that the opportunity structure, like density of workplaces or aggravated access in mountain areas, seem to be of minor importance compared to risk factors that relate to the immediate social situation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. The Food Supply We Take for Granted.
- Author
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Wallach, Jennifer Jensen
- Subjects
- *
FOOD supply , *CONSUMER behavior , *CITY dwellers , *FOOD preferences , *GOVERNMENT policy , *URBAN poor - Abstract
Keywords: food; activism; geography; hunger; marketplaces EN food activism geography hunger marketplaces 468 473 6 02/04/22 20220301 NES 220301 Tangires, Helen (2019). In 2020 and 2021, food media consumers accustomed to a steady diet of recipes, restaurant reviews, and celebrity chef profiles were confronted like never before with a much different kind of food-related storytelling. She argues that while twenty-first century food activists are focused on the issue of food "quality", most of the organizers she studied were concerned only with "whether people have food at all" (241). Although Baics does an impressive job detailing how the modes of urban food procurement were structured and restructured, he does not tease out the implications of the fact that food is not just another commodity. [Extracted from the article]
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- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. Thresholds.
- Author
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Tadiar, Neferti XM
- Subjects
- *
URBAN poor , *URBAN life , *LIMINALITY , *URBANIZATION , *SERVICE economy - Abstract
On the reticulated shores of city everywhere, the global urbanization project to rebuild cities as total mediacosmic platforms hosting the capitalizable life of globopolitical citizens, sites of a vitality little reckoned with emerge, hold on, disappear. In this essay, I discuss the thresholds that constitute the liminality of the vitality of the urban poor in Metro Manila, as well as the significance of that vitality for another understanding of our global, urban mode of life. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. Hope, home and insecurity: Gendered labours of resilience among the urban poor of Metro Cebu, the Philippines.
- Author
-
Ramalho, Jordana
- Subjects
- *
URBAN poor , *PRODUCTION (Economic theory) , *PSYCHOLOGICAL resilience , *LAND tenure , *HOPE , *SQUATTER settlements - Abstract
This article traces the labours of hope embedded in the everyday social reproductive practices of urban poor homeowner association members in Metro Cebu, the Philippines. It explores how aspirations for housing and land tenure security and the (failed) promises of opportunity bound in the urban materialise in the narratives and activities of women and men living in informal settlements. I argue that the sociality of hope, which propels and sustains homeowner associations, produces gendered labours of resilience amidst everyday circumstances of poverty, uncertainty, risk and displacement. As I reveal, these care-based practices constitute expressions of hope that are driven by moral codes associated with the family, industriousness and service to others. These findings reinforce the utility of hope as an analytical lens in geographical studies; one which broadens conceptualisations of labour beyond economic production to include, in this case, the emotional embodiments and reproductive activities that underpin people's everyday resilience. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. Limits to and opportunities for scaling participation: lessons from three city-wide urban poor networks in Dhaka, Bangladesh.
- Author
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Cawood, Sally
- Subjects
URBAN poor ,POLITICAL participation ,NONGOVERNMENTAL organizations ,COMMUNITY organization ,SOCIAL networks ,SQUATTER settlements - Abstract
In Dhaka, three urban poor networks play a central role in advocating for the rights and entitlements of low-income settlement residents. Despite their numerous achievements, this article outlines how attempts to scale participation via these networks are limited by three overlapping state–civil society processes: (1) the politicization and increased monitoring of non-governmental organizations (NGOs); (2) shifting donor preferences towards service delivery and the creation of new community-based organizations (CBOs); and (3) the ongoing dominance and paternalism of NGOs towards low-income settlement residents. By situating these findings within existing understandings of in/formal governance and political participation, it can be argued that attempts to scale may struggle to evade or transform deep structures of dependency, patronage and intermediation. Recognizing that scaling can and does occur under these conditions, the article outlines opportunities to support the city-wide networks and alternative forms of organizing, to address pressing needs and priorities. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. Inclusive recycling movements: a green deep democracy from below.
- Author
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José zapata Campos, María, Carenzo, Sebastián, Kain, Jaan-Henrik, Oloko, Michael, Reynosa, Jessica Pérez, and Zapata, Patrik
- Subjects
GREEN movement ,DEMOCRACY ,SOCIAL integration ,SUSTAINABILITY ,POOR communities ,URBAN poor - Abstract
This paper examines the multiple strategies articulated by grassroots recycler networks to bring about socioenvironmental change. The paper shows how these networks are an emblematic case of grassroots governmentality, whereby urban poor communities contribute to building more inclusive environmental regimes by developing technologies of power more typical of the powerful. These technologies include enumeration, with its resulting self-knowledge; the production of discourses and rationalities of social inclusion and environmental sustainability; and engagement in open and diverse alliances, at times with actors holding apparently antagonistic interests. The paper also reveals how recycling networks are a representative case of deep and green democracy. It is deep democracy, as grassroots networks strive to gain deep and true representativeness in their territories. It is green democracy, as it illustrates alternative pathways to environmental governance that is not limited to state and global organizations, but that also includes a range of control techniques emanating from the communities themselves. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Connectivity in Chaotic Urban Spaces: Mapping Informal Mobile Phone Market Clusters in Accra, Ghana.
- Author
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Oteng-Ababio, Martin and van der Velden, Maja
- Subjects
- *
CELL phones , *PUBLIC spaces , *ECONOMIC geography , *URBAN geography , *URBAN poor , *SALES culture , *COGNITIVE maps (Psychology) - Abstract
This article investigates the proliferation of informal mobile phone markets and contributes to the understanding of the changing urban economic geographies in Africa. It enriches comparative research by modestly bringing new theoretical ideas to bear, and explores how the spatial geography of mobile phone markets mediates urban governance. We argue that regardless of where in Accra mobile phone markets emerge, the same kind of processes and activities develop, and this recognition contrasts other works, which either focus on the city as a whole or on specific sites. Using key informant interviews, augmented with cognitive mapping, we observe the geography of mobile phone repairs and sales, intersecting socio-economic factors, and a collaborative culture among participants. Ultimately, our article touches upon the issues of power and agency by elucidating the relational dynamics between the informal operators and city authorities. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. COVID-19 responses: infrastructure inequality and privileged capacity to transform everyday life in South Africa.
- Author
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De Groot, Jiska and Lemanski, Charlotte
- Subjects
COVID-19 ,STAY-at-home orders ,SOCIAL distancing ,EVERYDAY life ,URBAN poor - Abstract
Throughout the early months of 2020, COVID-19 rapidly changed how the world functioned, with the closure of borders, schools and workplaces, national lockdowns, and the rapid normalization of "self-isolation" and "social distancing". However, while public health recommendations were broadly universal, human capacity to accordingly transform everyday life has differed significantly. We use the example of South Africa to highlight the privileged nature of the ability to transform one's life in response to COVID-19, arguing that the virus both highlights and exacerbates existing inequalities in access to infrastructure. For those living in urban poverty in South Africa, where access to basic infrastructure is limited, and where overcrowding and high density are the norm, it is frequently impossible to transform daily life in the required ways. The failure of global public health recommendations to recognize these inequalities, and to adapt advice to national and local contexts, reveals significant limitations that extend beyond this specific global pandemic. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. The Ohaka (Grave) Project: Post-secular social service delivery and resistant necropolitics in San'ya, Tokyo.
- Author
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Marr, Matthew D.
- Subjects
SOCIAL services ,URBAN poor ,TOMBS ,NEOLIBERALISM - Abstract
This is an ethnography of a Buddhist, Catholic, and secular collaboration tending to the souls of marginalized men in San'ya, Tokyo's former day labor ghetto. How does this post-secular project focused on death and the afterlife reshape relationships that bond the living and the dead? How does it relate to neoliberal biopolitics of urban poverty management? This paper demonstrates how the project subverts traditional Japanese patrilineal necrosociality in ways that enhance ontological security and social ties among participants. Additionally, project developers' post-secular notion of rapprochement through acknowledging and accepting differences between communities bridged long-time rifts among faith, social service, and activist groups. While in some ways the project enables neoliberal privatization of social services, it is also a potent form of resistant necropolitics from below that reconfigures social relations around death to connect diverse groups, highlighting and addressing the limitations of a familial model of welfare amid neoliberal capitalism. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. Contested marketplaces: Retail spaces at the global urban margins.
- Author
-
González, Sara
- Subjects
- *
MIXED-use developments , *PUBLIC spaces , *MARKETPLACES , *ONLINE shopping , *URBAN poor ,DEVELOPING countries - Abstract
This paper argues that retail spaces, such as marketplaces, are increasingly becoming sites of urban contestation. The globalisation of retail, online shopping and the redevelopment of cities has pushed marketplaces to the margins, but they still serve millions of people, particularly the urban poor. Concurrently, marketplaces are branded as authentic consumption experiences for tourists and residents. Building on these contradictions, I propose a novel framework with three analytical lenses to reposition marketplaces as marginal city spaces that serve as productive sites for studying urban transformation processes across the Global North and South. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. Inclusive shelter provision in Mogadishu.
- Author
-
Bonnet, Charlotte, Bryld, Erik, Kamau, Christine, Mohamud, Mohamed, and Farah, Fathia
- Subjects
SQUATTER settlements ,CITY dwellers ,URBAN poor ,INTERNALLY displaced persons ,PEOPLE with disabilities - Abstract
This article is based on a research project led by the International Institute for Environment and Development (IIED) on shelter in East Africa. It explores Mogadishu's history, political settlements and variations in housing to inform more inclusive, affordable shelter interventions. MAIN FINDINGS: • Connection between urban poverty and internal displacement. Mogadishu's informal settlements are inhabited by people displaced from other regions and poor urban residents. As the urban poor live in areas with high tenure insecurity and can be evicted without notice, there are migration flows both into the city and within Mogadishu itself. • Role of informal networks and relations. As access to land and shelter is governed by a complex system of formal and informal rules, having contacts with powerful actors in the informal settlements is key to finding shelter. • Vulnerabilities of women, people with disabilities, and young single men. In Somalia's patriarchal society, the male-headed family is the fundamental social unit; people who fall outside this category are heavily disadvantaged when accessing housing. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. Policing the war on drugs and the transformation of urban space in Manila.
- Author
-
Warburg, Anna Bræmer and Jensen, Steffen
- Subjects
- *
DRUG control , *PUBLIC spaces , *CITIES & towns , *POLICE , *URBAN poor , *COUNTERINSURGENCY - Abstract
This article explores policing and urban ordering in the Philippine war on drugs. With an empirical point of departure in ethnographic fieldwork conducted in Bagong Silang, a poor urban area on the outskirts of Metro Manila, the article highlights the perspective of the state police in an area that has been heavily exposed to the drug war and can be considered as one of its hot spots. It is examined how inspirations from counter-insurgency strategies are implemented in policing the war on drugs and discussed how this form of policing is negotiated and what implications it produces on the ground. In doing so, the article asks, 'how have counter-insurgency policing strategies transformed urban space and the possibility of life in the poorer sections of Manila'? Drawing on a conceptual framework on borders, policing and the production of fear, the article argues that there exists an intimate connection between the employed policing strategies and the transformation of urban space with the potential of fundamentally reconfiguring urban sociality in areas such as Bagong Silang. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. Co-producing land for housing through informal settlement upgrading: lessons from a Namibian municipality.
- Author
-
Delgado, Guillermo, Muller, Anna, Mabakeng, Royal, and Namupala, Martin
- Subjects
URBAN planning ,HOUSING ,CITIES & towns ,LOW-income housing ,URBAN poor ,URBAN research ,WOMEN'S empowerment - Abstract
This paper summarizes the informal settlement upgrading processes in the Namibian municipality of Gobabis, which are arguably the most accomplished bottom-up developments in the country so far. As these processes were made possible through a broad coalition of partners, we employ the lens of co-production and engage with the more recent literature on it, which focuses on questions of equity and empowerment. We note how co-production achieves more efficient use of resources and decentralizes power in urban development. We argue that in this case, efficiency and equity are aligned. We also note how despite these achievements, the balance of power remains uneven in favour of central and local governments. The paper also briefly describes the context of urban development in Namibia, and concludes with a set of questions for further research on co-production of land for housing the urban poor. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. Understanding and researching urban extreme poverty: a conceptual–methodological approach.
- Author
-
Yap, Christopher and McFarlane, Colin
- Subjects
URBAN poor ,POLITICAL ecology ,CITIES & towns ,URBAN research - Abstract
Urban extreme poverty has long been regarded as a vital challenge for policy and practice, but how might we research it? In this article, we set out a two-step approach to identifying and understanding the nature of urban extreme poverty (UEP). We experiment with an approach that does not define UEP in advance but seeks to examine it through a series of dimensions and approaches. Drawing on the long history of research on UEP, we argue that research would benefit from early scoping in context. This scoping begins by examining how UEP surfaces in relation to five dimensions: material, economic, political, spatial and emotional–subjective. From that base, we argue for a focus on the causes and form of UEP through dialogue among four epistemic approaches: political economy, political ecology, feminist urbanism and postcolonial urbanism. We illustrate this approach in relation to two quite distinct cities: Mumbai and Lima. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. Understanding Homelessness in Neoliberal City: A Study from Delhi.
- Author
-
Wang, T.Y. and Ghosh, Subhamay
- Subjects
- *
HOMELESSNESS , *URBAN poor , *NEOLIBERALISM , *DEMOLITION , *SLUMS - Abstract
'Homelessness' is the worst form of urban poverty, and in the wake of neoliberalism it has become more pervasive in cities across the world. Taking the case of Delhi, the study focuses on the making of homelessness, the connotation of being homeless, and the nature of responses from a governing institution to homelessness in the neoliberal city. The study reveals that large scale slum demolition in the last three decades has rendered thousands of people homeless. They are denied of basic human rights and human necessities. They are not even allowed to reside in the open spaces of the city. Governing actors have bypassed their duties by setting up only a 'few' night-shelters in the city, most of which remained unoccupied because of several adversities. The study also reveals that homelessness is the outcome of governance failure and the failure of the welfare state. But the structural problem of homelessness is completely overlooked both in policy and by 'other' sections of society. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. Electoral integrity and the repercussions of institutional manipulations: The 2019 general election in Thailand.
- Author
-
Jain, Purnendra and Sawasdee, Siripan Nogsuan
- Subjects
ELECTIONS ,POLITICAL parties ,JUNTAS ,INTEGRITY ,URBAN poor ,POLITICAL systems ,RURAL-urban differences - Abstract
Thailand's 2019 election was seen from the beginning to be a ritual to transform a military junta into an elected government. This qualitative article draws on the critical analysis of theories in authoritarianism and electoral integrity to shed light on the concept of competitive authoritarianism. The article, utilizing empirical data and historical narratives, illustrates Thailand's legal and political environment governing this election. The electoral results and post-election political party landscape reveal unintended consequences in manipulating political institutions. Although the newly introduced electoral system and institutional manipulations allowed the military co-opted Palang Pracharat party to select the prime minister even without controlling a majority in the House of Representatives, as projected, the establishment was inadvertently left with two robust opposition parties, namely the old Pheu Thai and the new-born Future Forward parties. The former represents the strongest political machine in Thailand, which has won five consecutive elections, while the latter symbolizes a new divide in Thai politics, armed with the power of social media, and poses a bigger threat to the military establishment. Remarkably, the electoral result not only pointed to a continued polarization, dominated by the cleavages of ultraconservative versus progressive and an urban-rural, rich-poor cleavage, but also a new division between older and younger generations. This article maintains that although Thailand's civil-military government might be deposed in the future due to several challenges facing them, the undemocratic political structure of military electoral co-optation polity remains ingrained on account of the way that the 2017 Constitution was crafted. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. Brokers and Tours: Selling Urban Poverty and Violence in Latin America and the Caribbean.
- Subjects
TOUR brokers & operators ,URBAN poor ,URBAN violence ,URBAN tourism ,ART museum curators ,VIOLENCE against women - Abstract
This article explores how so-called "slum" tourism commodifies poverty and violence, transforming urban deprivation into a tourism product. In particular, we pay ethnographic attention to the role of brokers who mediate encounters between residents and tourists. The article explores how brokers—tour guides, art curators and civil society organizations—work to mediate power structures and enact a specific representational-performative politics. In so doing, brokers play a key role in aestheticizing and performing poverty and violence and converting disadvantaged spaces into a tourist product. We argue that brokers are vital to the reproduction of existing inequalities and to the formation of new social relationships and subjectivities. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. International political economy and international political sociology meet in Jakarta: Feminist research agendas seen through everyday life.
- Author
-
Elias, Juanita, Rethel, Lena, and Tilley, Lisa
- Subjects
- *
ECONOMICS , *INTERNATIONAL competition , *POLITICAL sociology , *EVERYDAY life , *FEMINISTS , *URBAN poor - Abstract
Feminist International Political Economy (IPE), with its focus on the gendered dimensions of social reproduction and market life, provides ground for fruitful engagements between IPE and IPS. As Hudson[15] has argued, for example, much feminist IR has prioritised "discursive abstraction", a tendency that feminist IPE work destabilises in important ways by 'guiding it back to a concern with (everyday) economic insecurities'. Heidi Hudson, '(Re) Framing the Relationship between Discourse and Materiality in Feminist Security Studies and Feminist IPE', I Politics & Gender i , 11(2), 2015, pp. 413-19. [Extracted from the article]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. Clientelism and Planning in the Informal Settlements of Developing Democracies.
- Author
-
Deuskar, Chandan
- Subjects
- *
PATRONAGE , *URBAN poor , *SERVICES for poor people , *DEMOCRACY - Abstract
The informal provision of benefits to the poor in exchange for political support, known as clientelism, often provides access to land and services for the urban poor in informal settlements in developing democracies. This review of multidisciplinary literature finds that while clientelism provides the urban poor with some access to the state, its benefits are often inadequate and inequitable. This kind of informal provision also disincentivizes or interferes with the implementation of formal plans. The literature provides some examples of transitions away from clientelism, but lessons for planners in facilitating such transitions are elusive. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. Broken Glass: The Social Evil of Urban Poverty and a Critical Education.
- Author
-
Wheeler-Bell, Quentin
- Subjects
- *
URBAN poor , *URBAN schools , *PHILOSOPHY , *SOCIAL movements , *SOCIAL justice - Abstract
Ghettos are a social evil. They are social atrocities maintained by inexcusable racist laws and practices, structures of class domination, and institutionalized political marginalization. After Brown v. The Board of Education, educational reformers have increasingly (mis)framed the problem of "ghetto schools" as a failure to provide urban youth with the social and cultural capital to integrate into mainstream society. This integrationist approach is insufficient because it inadequately addresses the social evil of ghetto poverty. Instead, I argue, a critical education approach is morally more appropriate because it focuses on giving children the tools for transforming capitalism and racial domination. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. Informalized containment: food markets and the governance of the informal food sector in Windhoek, Namibia.
- Author
-
Kazembe, Lawrence N, Nickanor, Ndeyapo, and Crush, Jonathan
- Subjects
INFORMAL sector ,STREET food ,FOOD marketing ,URBAN poor ,CONSUMPTION (Economics) ,CONSUMER profiling - Abstract
Policy responses to the growth of the informal food sector in African cities vary from benign neglect to active destruction. The eradication of street food vending is the dominant mode of governance. Alternative approaches that recognize the inevitability of informality and the role of the sector in making food accessible to the urban poor have begun to emerge. One is an enclose-and-contain model that creates spaces for trading and seeks to confine trading to these spaces through active policing. This strategy has been pursued in Windhoek, Namibia but has been compromised by consumer demand, which is not satisfied by the city's approved markets, and by the actions of street traders who cluster at key locations and force tacit official recognition. This paper examines the origins and development of the resulting hybrid model of informalized containment, as well as the profile of consumers who patronize both types of markets. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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