
The Spatiality of Livelihoods – Negotiations of Access to Public Space in Dhaka, Bangladesh
Author(s): Kirsten Hackenbroch (Author)
- Publisher: Franz Steiner Verlag
- Publication Date: January 31, 2013
- Language: English
- Print length: 396 pages
- ISBN-10: 351510321X
- ISBN-13: 9783515103213
Book Description
Access to public space is an essential asset of urban livelihoods. Pavements, street spaces, vacant plots, public parks and city squares are used intensively for all kinds of activities. As open space in rapidly growing and poorly planned conurbations is a very scarce resource, it is highly contested between different groups pursuing strongly vested economic, social and cultural interests. The research for this book is grounded in Bangladesh’s megacity Dhaka, where more than 300,000 additional inhabitants have to be accommodated every year in highly densified settlements. Empirical evidence collected in a consolidated inner-city settlement with low to middle-income residents and in a low-income settlement without planning approval serves as the basis for analysis. Following a grounded theory approach that integrates elements of ethnographic research, the author applies a complex and innovative set of qualitative methods. With the newly coined term “spatiality of (urban) livelihoods” the research deconstructs the nexus between poverty and urban space in the everyday life of urban dwellers and systematises the negotiations for access to this scarce resource. The emerging actor constellations and power relations in negotiations are embedded in the recent discourses on urban informality and spatialities of (in)justice.
Editorial Reviews
Review
“Geographers dealing with risk and uncertainty in informal open spaces as well as urban development experts are invited to study this thoughtfully written and well-designed publication.””Kirsten Hackenbroch has delivered an insightful and original study of the contested nature of public space””The book concludes after breaking new grounds in urban ethnography that appropriate urban policy making could make a difference. The recommendations – to create and protect more public spaces, recognise the diversity of the users of public space and ensure equal citizenship – are sound guidelines for the urban policy makers to change things for the better, provided they care.”
About the Author
Studium der Raumplanung an der Universitat Dortmund und University of Aberdeen. Seit 2006 Wissenschaftliche Mitarbeiterin an der Fakultat Raumplanung, TU Dortmund, dort seit 2007 Bearbeitung eines Forschungsprojektes im DFG-Schwerpunktprogramm “Megacities – Megachallenge: Informal Dynamics of Global Change”. Forschungsschwerpunkte: Stadtplanung in internationaler Perspektive, Stadtgeographie, Informalitat, Aushandlung von Zugang zu urbanen Ressourcen, Stadtentwicklung und Machtverhaltnisse, Planung und raumliche Gerechtigkeit, qualitative Forschungsmethoden
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