Rethinking urban environmental and infrastructural governance in the everyday: perspectives from and of the global South

Yaffa Truelove, Natasha Cornea

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

In the global South, urban infrastructures and environments are marked by significant heterogeneity and the presence of multiple overlapping systems, configurations and actor networks that keep the city working – water flows, electricity is available, and waste is collected. This occurs in the face of what has been traditionally characterized as failed or incomplete infrastructures and the presence of governance practices that often deviate from formalized norms and policies. However, increasingly academics are arguing that such heterogeneity represents not failure but spaces of possibility and transition. This introduction lays out some of the theoretical underpinnings and conceptual ideas that frame urban environmental and infrastructural governance in the everyday. We then outline how the contributions of this Special Issue (SI) reveal the contested, negotiated, and situated nature of everyday urban governance and the multiple ways that politics become spatialized and power shapes contemporary cities, urban environments, and infrastructures. The SI brings together an interdisciplinary and diverse range of contributions focusing on case studies in secondary and metropolitan cities in India, Tanzania, Malawi, Kenya and Guinea-Bissau, and Brazil. Read together, the papers in this issue contribute to four primary debates and discussions in urban studies and social science studies of the urban environment. These include responding to noted absences in studies of urban political ecologies, contributing to new understandings of the urban political, focusing on the practices that produce political subjectivity and render groups governable, and highlighting everyday spaces of possibility for a more equitable urban future.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)231-246
Number of pages16
JournalEnvironment and Planning C: Politics and Space
Volume39
Issue number2
Early online date16 Nov 2020
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 16 Mar 2021

Bibliographical note

Funding Information: The authors are grateful for the participants of the 2017 American Association of Geographers session “Rethinking Urban Environmental and Infrastructural Governance in the Everyday,” which was the catalyst for later organizing this Special Issue (SI). We also thank Eugene McCann for his ongoing support and feedback of the papers in this SI, without which the project would not have been possible. Finally, we wish to thank Katie Nudd for her assistance and support of with each paper and the SI overall.

Keywords

  • everyday governance
  • everyday state
  • urban environment
  • Urban infrastructure
  • urban political ecology

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • Environmental Science (miscellaneous)
  • Geography, Planning and Development
  • Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law
  • Public Administration

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