‘I Cannot Stand up to my Chief nor the State’: Reflections on Development-Induced Housing Mobility in Pro-Poor Housing Systems in Tamale, Ghana

IF 1 4区 社会学 Q2 AREA STUDIES
I. Yakubu, M. Spocter, R. Donaldson
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引用次数: 5

Abstract

ABSTRACT In Ghana, housing practices for the majority of urban residents lie outside the scope of formal housing markets and planning regulations. This has made urban upgrading a key component of physical development in cities in Ghana. In the face of accelerated urbanisation and the corresponding upsurge in informal housing practices, local authorities continue to grapple with the challenges of negotiating and implementing upgrading programmes without compromising pro-poor housing systems. As cities grow, mainly through the accretion of rural settlement nuclei, the quest to achieve orderly physical development has meant that new development ought to be planned alongside the upgrading and/or realignment of existing settlements. This complex spatial development trajectory makes forced residential mobility an integral component of post-independence urban development initiatives in many towns. Based on interviews with selected households and key stakeholders at city and neighbourhood levels, this study critically examines the incidence of development-induced residential mobility practices in the pro-poor housing systems of Tamale, Ghana. It makes a significant contribution to our understanding of the operation of dual urban management systems and how the navigation of such systems can be frustrating. The results show how and why sub-district local government actors collaborate with traditional chieftaincies to compel the relocation of poor families under the pretence of providing access roads. Paved roads have thus become deeply engrained in the housing politics of low-income communities, and form part of the narratives of the success or failure of chiefs or elected local government representatives. It is recommended that the scope of stakeholder engagement be broadened to promote inclusive urban development in Tamale.
“我无法对抗我的酋长和国家”:对加纳塔马莱扶贫住房系统中发展引发的住房流动的思考
摘要在加纳,大多数城市居民的住房实践不在正规住房市场和规划法规的范围内。这使得城市升级成为加纳城市物质发展的关键组成部分。面对城市化的加速和非正规住房做法的相应激增,地方当局继续努力应对谈判和实施升级方案的挑战,同时又不损害有利于穷人的住房系统。随着城市的发展,主要是通过农村定居点核心的增加,寻求实现有序的物质发展意味着新的发展应该与现有定居点的升级和/或重新调整一起规划。这种复杂的空间发展轨迹使强制居民流动成为许多城镇独立后城市发展举措的组成部分。基于对选定家庭和城市和社区层面的主要利益相关者的采访,本研究批判性地考察了加纳塔马莱扶贫住房系统中发展引发的住宅流动做法的发生率。它对我们理解双重城市管理系统的运作以及这种系统的导航如何令人沮丧做出了重大贡献。研究结果表明,街道地方政府行为体如何以及为什么与传统酋长合作,以提供通路为借口,迫使贫困家庭搬迁。因此,铺砌的道路已深深植根于低收入社区的住房政治中,并成为酋长或民选地方政府代表成败叙事的一部分。建议扩大利益相关者参与的范围,以促进塔马勒的包容性城市发展。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
African Studies
African Studies AREA STUDIES-
CiteScore
1.80
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0.00%
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