Globalization and sustainable development: at the urban crossroad
In: The European journal of development research, Volume 30, Issue 2, p. 169-171
ISSN: 1743-9728
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In: The European journal of development research, Volume 30, Issue 2, p. 169-171
ISSN: 1743-9728
World Affairs Online
In: Urbanisation, Volume 1, Issue 1, p. 1-5
ISSN: 2456-3714
In: World development: the multi-disciplinary international journal devoted to the study and promotion of world development, Volume 78, p. 529-540
Ironically, in the North where only a minority of scholars are engaged in applied or policy research, they are navel gazing about what 'the policy turn' implies for geography. Here in South Africa, where consulting, policy or applied research is a ubiquitous feature of geography departments, we have been tardy, or perhaps reluctant, to open the conversation about the implications of the way many of us now work. Nowhere is this more evident than in the broad arena of urban research where the restructuring of local government, massive urbanisation and the uneven growth of the economy has created an insatiable demand for applied work on cities and towns. In this paper I use three general issues raised by our Northern counterparts to open up debate among South African geographers about the drivers of knowledge and the way this might impact on our urban future. The first issue relates to the role of public intellectuals in a society in transition and includes an assessment of the formative versus the evaluative role of intellectuals, as well as discussion on the politics of positionality and who does the policy research. The second issue takes off from here and probes who defines the intellectual and policy agendas. Crucial questions about how knowledge circulates and the role of consultants are highlighted. The third area shifts the debate into the academy and asks about the relevance of geography for urban policy. Drawing from these three pointers the final two sections of the paper make a case for recasting urban geographical scholarship in South Africa to, for example, take issues of scale and the local state more seriously, to move beyond the segregationist frame of the historical geographers and to fill the empirical and conceptual gaps within which the practice of urban government and governmentality actually take place. In conclusion I suggest that to do this it is imperative that we re-bridge the academic policy divide in new and more productive ways than the current covert linkages that exist at present. This means among other things, rethinking the academic value and integrity of policy work, as well addressing the material concerns that reinforce the status quo. This means confronting the place of consultant income for academics, acknowledging that there can be no evidence based policy without government and private sector investment in urban research and overcoming the skills gap in the urban sector.
BASE
In: International development planning review: IDPR, Volume 26, Issue 4, p. 377-399
ISSN: 1478-3401
In: International development planning review: IDPR, Volume 26, Issue 4, p. 377-400
ISSN: 1474-6743
The increasing significance of cities in the global system and the urbanisation of poverty underpin the call to reassess the role of local government in fostering redistributive justice. The paper shows how in post-colonial contexts the institutional frameworks of city government are poorly adapted to roll out effective programmes that will improve the lives of the urban poor. Using Johannesburg's process of institutional reform, known locally as iGoli 2002, the paper reflects on the city's efforts to mainstream a developmental agenda. An overview of poverty profiles in Johannesburg provides the platform for assessing the developmental challenges facing iGoli 2002's architects. (InWent/DÜI)
World Affairs Online
In: African studies, Volume 57, Issue 2, p. 147-166
ISSN: 1469-2872
In: African studies, Volume 55, Issue 2, p. 90-92
ISSN: 1469-2872
In: Urban forum, Volume 2, Issue 1, p. 21-39
ISSN: 1874-6330
In: The SAGE Handbook of Political Geography, p. 595-608
In: Sustainable development goals series
This volume brings together a unique set of interventions from a variety of contributors to bridge the gap between research and policy with a distinct focus on Africa, drawing on work conducted as part of multiple interconnected research projects and networks on the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) and global policy implementation in African cities. Through the framework of the SDGs, and in particular Goal 11, the book aims to contribute to generating new knowledge about approaches to SDG localization that are grounded in complex and diverse local contexts, needs and realities, integrated perspectives and collaborative research. The volume draws together contributions from urban experts from different professional and disciplinary backgrounds, ranging from the fields of governance, planning, data, sustainability, health and finance, to provide critical insight into the current dynamics, actors, blind spots, constraints and also good practices and opportunities for realizing the SDGs in Africa. Readers will gain detailed and informed insight into the African experience of SDG localization, monitoring and implementation based on multiple case studies, and will learn of the practices needed to accelerate action towards achieving the SDGs in urban contexts. This book will be of interest to researchers and planners focusing on SDGs implementation in Africa, as well as government organizations, development practitioners and students committed to long-term, inclusive sustainable and participatory development
Pt. 1. Critical urbanism -- pt. 2. The urban : past, present, future -- pt. 3. Global economic turbulence : (re)configuring the urban -- pt. 4. Politics, transformation and the southern city -- pt. 5. Negotiating society and identity in urban spaces of the south -- pt. 6. Conceptualizing the built environment : accounting for southern urban complexities -- pt. 7. Big stories of urban change.
In: International journal of urban and regional research, Volume 47, Issue 2, p. 299-304
ISSN: 1468-2427
AbstractThe nature of research funding shapes knowledge outcomes, especially for urban research that is conducted in multiple sites and over multiple years. Recent unplanned cuts in the Global Challenges Research Fund (GCRF) grants, alongside the rupture caused by Covid‐19, created ethical and procedural issues for completing the PEAK Urban programme. Building on durable partnerships, setting principles for the reduced fund distribution and adjusting modes of working enabled PEAK Urban to navigate the fiscal disruption—but the difficult episode highlights lessons for the ethical organization of global urban research under conditions of uncertainty.
In: International journal of urban and regional research, Volume 40, Issue 1, p. 236-246
ISSN: 1468-2427
AbstractAdvancing global urbanism depends upon making Africa's cities a more dominant part of the global urban narrative. Constructing a more legitimate research agenda for African cities, however, necessitates a repositioning of conventional modes of research. To achieve intellectual and political traction in what are typical African research conditions—where human needs are great, information is poor, conditions of governance are complex and the reality is changeable—we reflect on the experiences of the African Centre for Cities where (alongside conventional use of theory, methods and data) a translational mode of working has been adopted. The notion of translational urban research praxis captures more than the idea of applied research or even co‐production, and encompasses integrating the research conception, design, execution, application and reflection—and conceiving of this set of activities as a singular research/practice process that is by its nature deeply political and locationally embedded. In this way we suggest that African urbanism can be both usefully illuminated by global theories and methods, and can simultaneously be constitutive of the reform of the ideas through which cities generally are understood.