Conceptualizing African urban peripheries

Meth, P. , Goodfellow, T., Todes, A. and Charlton, S. (2021) Conceptualizing African urban peripheries. International Journal of Urban and Regional Research, 45(6), pp. 985-1007. (doi: 10.1111/1468-2427.13044)

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Abstract

Recent years have seen a rising interest in peri-urban spaces, urban frontiers and new suburbanisms, including in African contexts. However, given the scale of urban growth and the extreme diversity of formations emerging on the geographical edges of African city-regions, a deeper understanding is needed of the drivers of peripheral urbanisms and the lived experiences of urban change in these spaces. Based on a comparative research project in South Africa and Ethiopia, this article draws out the epistemologies of researching African urban peripheries and presents a new conceptual framework. It offers a language for interpreting processes of peripheral development and change, highlighting five distinct but overlapping logics which we term speculative, vanguard, auto-constructed, transitioning and inherited. Rather than describing bounded peripheral spaces, we argue that these logics can co-exist, hybridize and bleed into each other in different ways in specific places and at different temporal junctures. Centring our methodological practices of comparative analysis, and privileging the voices of those living in urban peripheries, the article employs critical readings of urban scholarship before exploring how these five logics illuminate the complex processes of urban peripheral evolution and transformation. Formulating these logics helps to fill a lacuna in urban conceptualization with potential relevance beyond African contexts.

Item Type:Articles
Additional Information:We gratefully acknowledge funding from the UK Economic and Social Research Council (ESRC) and the SA National Research Foundation (NRF) which supported the research project. Grant numbers: Economic and Social Research Council. Research funding: ES/N014111/1, NRF 101579 (South African funding council)
Status:Published
Refereed:Yes
Glasgow Author(s) Enlighten ID:Meth, Professor Paula
Authors: Meth, P., Goodfellow, T., Todes, A., and Charlton, S.
College/School:College of Social Sciences > School of Social and Political Sciences > Urban Studies
Journal Name:International Journal of Urban and Regional Research
Publisher:Wiley
ISSN:0309-1317
ISSN (Online):1468-2427
Published Online:14 October 2021
Copyright Holders:Copyright © 2021 The Authors
First Published:First published in International Journal of Urban and Regional Research 45(6):985-1007
Publisher Policy:Reproduced under a Creative Commons license

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