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E-musrenbang: a digital framework for local participatory planning at the community level International Development Planning Review (IF 2.071) Pub Date : 2022-04-01 Dhimas Bayu Anindito,Saut A. H. Sagala,Ari Krisna Mawira Tarigan
It has been a longstanding mission of policymakers, good governance activists and scholars to encourage greater public participation in formulating legal drafts for better city planning. In recent years, emphasis has been placed upon digital engagement as a process which arguably allows more citizens to voice their needs and desires. In Indonesia, an example of such practices can be seen in the e-musrenbang
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Multi-dimensional conflict and the resilient urban informal economy in Karachi, Pakistan International Development Planning Review (IF 2.071) Pub Date : 2022-04-01 Peter Mackie,Alison M. B. Brown,Abid Mehmood,Saeed Ud Din Ahmed
This paper explores the resilience of the urban informal economy through multi-dimensional conflict. Karachi constituted an ideal case study for the research given the intensity and paradigmatic nature of the multi-dimensional conflict experienced in the city between 2008 and 2013. The paper applies a comparative frame in three sites (Sadar, Orangi and Lyari) to illustrate resilience of the informal
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‘People don’t like the ultra-poor like me’: an intersectional approach to gender and participation in urban water, sanitation and hygiene (WASH) projects in Dhaka’s bostis International Development Planning Review (IF 2.071) Pub Date : 2022-04-01 Sally Cawood,Md. Fazle Rabby
In this paper we use an anti, intra and inter-categorical intersectional approach, and ethnographic enquiry in Dhaka, Bangladesh, to nuance debate over gender and participation in urban water, sanitation and hygiene (WASH) projects in low-income settlements. We make three claims. First, that a mismatch exists between how ‘women’ are framed and targeted in WASH projects and everyday experience characterised
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E-musrenbang: a digital framework for local participatory planning at the community level International Development Planning Review (IF 2.071) Pub Date : 2022-04-01 Dhimas Bayu Anindito,Saut A. H. Sagala,Ari Krisna Mawira Tarigan
It has been a longstanding mission of policymakers, good governance activists and scholars to encourage greater public participation in formulating legal drafts for better city planning. In recent years, emphasis has been placed upon digital engagement as a process which arguably allows more citizens to voice their needs and desires. In Indonesia, an example of such practices can be seen in the e-musrenbang
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Multi-dimensional conflict and the resilient urban informal economy in Karachi, Pakistan International Development Planning Review (IF 2.071) Pub Date : 2022-04-01 Peter Mackie,Alison M. B. Brown,Abid Mehmood,Saeed Ud Din Ahmed
This paper explores the resilience of the urban informal economy through multi-dimensional conflict. Karachi constituted an ideal case study for the research given the intensity and paradigmatic nature of the multi-dimensional conflict experienced in the city between 2008 and 2013. The paper applies a comparative frame in three sites (Sadar, Orangi and Lyari) to illustrate resilience of the informal
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The value of development researchers: structural racism, universities and UK Overseas Development Assistance (ODA) International Development Planning Review (IF 2.071) Pub Date : 2022-04-01 Kamna Patel,Ala’a Shehabi
In this Viewpoint we explore and speculate on the value of development researchers at what is an extraordinary moment in the relationship between UK universities and public research funding from UK Overseas Development Assistance (ODA) in the period following massive cuts to the state aid budget in March 2021. We anchor our exploration in structural racism and its manifestation in the politics of aid
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‘People don’t like the ultra-poor like me’: an intersectional approach to gender and participation in urban water, sanitation and hygiene (WASH) projects in Dhaka’s bostis International Development Planning Review (IF 2.071) Pub Date : 2022-04-01 Sally Cawood,Md. Fazle Rabby
In this paper we use an anti, intra and inter-categorical intersectional approach, and ethnographic enquiry in Dhaka, Bangladesh, to nuance debate over gender and participation in urban water, sanitation and hygiene (WASH) projects in low-income settlements. We make three claims. First, that a mismatch exists between how ‘women’ are framed and targeted in WASH projects and everyday experience characterised
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On the governing of ‘gray’ trading spaces in Accra: multiple powers and ambiguous ‘worlding’ practices International Development Planning Review (IF 2.071) Pub Date : 2022-01-01 Lena Fält
Recent studies on ‘urban informality’ stress the role of the state in the production and governing of ‘gray spaces’. This paper contributes to this body of research by emphasising the multiple actors involved in the governance of informal land uses and their ambiguous positions on how these spaces should best be understood and approached. Based on an in-depth case study of ‘gray’ trading spaces in
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Electrifying urban Africa: energy access, city-making and globalisation in Nigeria and Benin International Development Planning Review (IF 2.071) Pub Date : 2022-01-01 Mélanie Rateau,Armelle Choplin
Electricity access has become a crucial issue in global South cities. While demand is growing, conventional grids are failing or insufficient, especially in Africa. Urban dwellers therefore have to develop a wide range of (in)formal infrastructures to meet their daily electricity needs. Building on recent studies on urban electricity in the global South, this paper aims to contribute to the debates
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Urban equality and the SDGs: three provocations for a relational agenda International Development Planning Review (IF 2.071) Pub Date : 2022-01-01 Stephanie Butcher
We live in an increasingly urban, increasingly unequal world. This is nowhere more evident than in cities of the global South, where many residents face deep injustices in their ability to access vital services, participate in decision-making or to have their rights recognised as citizens. In this regard, the rallying cry of the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) to ‘leave no one behind’ offers significant
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The social regulation of livelihoods in unplanned settlements in Freetown: implications for strategies of formalisation International Development Planning Review (IF 2.071) Pub Date : 2022-01-01 Julian Walker,Braima Koroma,Sudie Austina Sellu,Andrea Rigon
This paper questions strategies of economic formalisation which prioritise the extension of state regulation as a means of extending access to labour protection and social protection. It draws on a research project on key livelihood systems and their associated governance arrangements in three unplanned urban settlements in Freetown, Sierra Leone. Our analysis of these fishing, and sand and stone-quarrying
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Global extractive imperative: from local resistance to unburnable fuels International Development Planning Review (IF 2.071) Pub Date : 2022-01-01 Murat Arsel,Lorenzo Pellegrini
Since the early 2000s, there has been an ‘extractive imperative’ in Latin America that made intensified extraction the policy solution to all socioeconomic challenges. More recently, a similar consensus has emerged in a diversity of political, economic and geographical contexts - such as Turkey, India and the United States - that makes it possible to speak of a ‘global extractive imperative’. The imperative
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Policy analysis of Korea’s development cooperation with sub-Saharan Africa: a focus on fragile states International Development Planning Review (IF 2.071) Pub Date : 2021-10-01 Huck-ju Kwon,Suyeon Lee,Ye Eun Ha
It has been ten years since the New Deal for Engagement in Fragile States was endorsed by the global community. The government of South Korea set out development initiatives to put fragile states at the top of its development agenda and substantially increased its bilateral aid to them. This study analyses the policy orientations of South Korea’s aid to fragile states by exploring the determinants
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Beyond a standardised urban lexicon: which vocabulary matters? International Development Planning Review (IF 2.071) Pub Date : 2021-10-01 Shreyashi Dasgupta,Noura Wahby
Urban vocabulary has been influenced by global patterns of modernity, capitalism and anglophone academia. These lexicons are increasingly standardised and shape dominant conceptual approaches in city debates. However, contemporary urban theories indicate a shift toward understanding the ‘urban’ and ‘cities’ from multiple perspectives. An emerging urban vocabulary is being built to capture the significance
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The making and unmaking of Tarlabasi, Istanbul: an account of territorial stigmatisation International Development Planning Review (IF 2.071) Pub Date : 2021-10-01 Aysegul Can
Territorial stigmatisation has been drawing attention in the past decade as an important concept in analysing the bad reputation of run-down neighbourhoods and how this bad reputation is used and produced by state agencies. Especially, the links between territorial stigmatisation and urban policies that are followed by state-led gentrification processes have been an emerging discussion in this analysis
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The politics of infrastructural aesthetics: a case of Delhi’s Bus Rapid Transit corridor International Development Planning Review (IF 2.071) Pub Date : 2021-10-01 Thomas Oommen,Ryan Christopher Sequeira
This paper studies how transportation infrastructure projects are dependent on making aesthetic arguments through form, space and experience. It does this through a discourse analysis of the media coverage of the Delhi Bus Rapid Transit (BRT) corridor. Tracing the planning history of the BRT, it explores how it was construed as ineffective, expensive and dangerous. Deconstructing the BRT discourse
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Conceptualising gentrification: relevance of gentrification research in the Indian context International Development Planning Review (IF 2.071) Pub Date : 2021-10-01 Prerona Das
The concept of gentrification, originally proposed by Ruth Glass on the basis of her observations of neighbourhood change in London, has been reconceptualised as well as criticised by scholars over the years. Though the concept has travelled over time and space, it still remains a very anglophone concept, and the extent of its applicability in the global South has been questioned. Especially in a country
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Labour power, materiality and protests in Ghana’s petroleum and gold mines International Development Planning Review (IF 2.071) Pub Date : 2021-10-01 William Otchere-Darko,Austin Dziwornu Ablo
We examine the role of resource materiality in extractive labour protests in Ghana. Focusing on petroleum and gold mining, we centre contestations as part of the resources’ socio-natural constituents. Research data was obtained from social conflict databases, newspapers and field interviews. The analysis focused on themes and discourses on protest emergence, mobilisation, negotiation and impacts. Findings
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Beyond a standardised urban lexicon: which vocabulary matters? International Development Planning Review (IF 2.071) Pub Date : 2021-10-01 Aseem Inam
This epilogue reflects on the introduction and three papers of this special issue in order to highlight the issue’s contribution to the vital conversation of re-wording and re-theorising the urban. To further advance this conversation, we must recognise the very real imbalances of access to resources and power to influence that exist between the global North and global South, including resources to
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Marginal cities in conflict: emerging geographies of spatial accumulation International Development Planning Review (IF 2.071) Pub Date : 2021-10-01 Edwar Calderón
This paper discusses how marginal cities surrounded by rich hinterlands in geographies of conflict display city-building processes that transform them into emergent geographies of spatial accumulation. Embracing recent debates on geographies of accumulation in the global South, this paper reveals three interrelated strategies that shape capitalist urbanisation in marginal cities of conflict. The empirical
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The limits of insulation: the long-term political dynamics of public-private service delivery International Development Planning Review (IF 2.071) Pub Date : 2021-10-01 Isadora Araujo Cruxên
Public-private collaboration is deemed critical for improving service delivery in the global South. This article examines how relations between state and private investors develop over time - and, by extension, how they affect service delivery - in different collaborative arrangements. Through a comparative historical analysis of two mixed-ownership water and sanitation companies in Brazil, the article
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Towards a comparative research agenda on in situ urbanisation and rural governance transformation International Development Planning Review (IF 2.071) Pub Date : 2021-06-01 Donald Brown
This article explores how rural settlements urbanise, and how rural governance transforms in the process. The question is motivated by the significant contribution that smaller urban centres are projected to make to the world’s future urban growth, the majority of which will occur in the global South. Many smaller centres are emerging through in situ urbanisation, wherein a rural settlement becomes
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Adaptive project management for the civil society sector: towards an academic research agenda International Development Planning Review (IF 2.071) Pub Date : 2021-06-01 Lena Gutheil
In order to react adequately to the complex, fast-changing and politicised environments in which development projects operate, donors have started adopting more adaptive project management approaches. Projects dealing with civil society actors in particular are said to benefit from adaptive management. As adaptive management largely depends on locally led and politically smart programming, it is presented
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Non-metropolitan cities in Latin American urban studies: between ‘trickle-down urban theory’ and ‘singularisation theory’ International Development Planning Review (IF 2.071) Pub Date : 2021-06-01 Luis Vergara,Gonzalo Salazar
Non-metropolitan cities are subject to growing attention in Latin American urban studies. However, there is no research that critically analyses the territorial, epistemological and methodological approaches that have been adopted within this line of academic work. This article deals with this knowledge gap, arguing that specialised literature tends to approach non-metropolitan places as mini-metropolises
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Foreign direct investment, enclaves and liveability: a case study of Korean activities in Hanoi, Vietnam International Development Planning Review (IF 2.071) Pub Date : 2021-06-01 Hyung Min Kim
Foreign Direct Investment (FDI) is a core element for global capital flows and a key driver for urban transformation. However, the ways in which FDI flows have been associated with the production of new urban spaces have attracted little academic attention. This research investigates how FDI activities have led to the migration of expatriate workers and their family members who have established ethnic
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Conforming with the urban ideal? ‘New urbanites’ in Rwanda’s emerging towns International Development Planning Review (IF 2.071) Pub Date : 2021-06-01 Ine Cottyn
The Rwandan government is taking a very directive approach to the process of urbanisation, based on an urban model that is strongly influenced by modernist discourses and guided by neoliberal policies. Its pursuit of an ideal of ‘modern urbanity’ in rapidly growing small towns implies an ideal type of modern urbanite; however, not everyone fits this ideal. The focus of this article is on those urban
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Viewpoint Theorisations of African cities need to be careful of jumping onto the ‘urban band wagon’ International Development Planning Review (IF 2.071) Pub Date : 2021-06-01 Mfaniseni Fana Sihlongonyane
The observation that cities are growing rapidly especially in the African continent is well acknowledged around the world. Indeed, ‘an urban-centric discourse’ has emerged to assert that the future is ‘urban’ as more people are moving to live in cities (UN, 2018). While the issue of growth cannot be challenged, one needs to look at the dangers of this discourse in African cities. The dynamics of urban
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From gender planning to gender transformation: positionality, theory and practice in cities of the global South International Development Planning Review (IF 2.071) Pub Date : 2021-04-01 Caroline O. N. Moser
This article reflects on my contribution as an urban feminist scholar-gender expert practitioner to Gender and Development (GAD) theory and practice in cities of the South in relation to my changing positionality within specific institutional contexts. My journey started in the 1980s with urban gender planning, conceptualised in the Development Planning Unit, a United Kingdom-based urban planning unit
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The inventiveness of informality: an introduction International Development Planning Review (IF 2.071) Pub Date : 2021-01-01 Nicholas A. Phelps
In this introduction I set the scene for the five full papers that appear in this special issue. Noting the lack of major overlaps in the concerns of different strands of literature as they address issues of urban economic informality, I argue the need for an interdisciplinary dialogue for uncovering aspects of the ingenuity, innovation and inventiveness found among informal businesses in the global
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How can street routines inform state regulation? Learning from informal traders in Baclaran, Metro Manila International Development Planning Review (IF 2.071) Pub Date : 2021-01-01 Redento B. Recio
Informal vendors have occupied the streets of Metro Manila’s Baclaran district since the 1950s. Their presence has generated policies seeking to manage or banish street hawking. Years of street occupancy, however, have enabled the vendors to enforce grassroots mechanisms to appropriate streetscapes. In this paper, I analyse three routinised practices - the haging occupancy, the Bermonths routine and
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Informality and the branding of creative places: the case of Suci screen-printing kampong in Bandung, Indonesia International Development Planning Review (IF 2.071) Pub Date : 2021-01-01 Fikri Zul Fahmi,Dinar Ramadhani,Aliyah Alfianda Dwicahyani,Adiwan Fahlan Aritenang
This paper examines how informality is utilised in the branding of urban kampong and how this reshapes kampong development in the context of the global South. We examine the case of Suci area, Bandung, which the local government relabelled as a ‘creative tourism kampong’ in order to rejuvenate the identity of the long-established businesses in the area. Informality is thus strategically used to develop
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The interplay of tacit and explicit knowledge in the informal economy: the atypical case of a recycling family business in Mexico City International Development Planning Review (IF 2.071) Pub Date : 2021-01-01 Louise Guibrunet
How does the informal economy innovate? Innovation depends, in part, on the generation and use of distinct types of knowledge. Yet, very little is known on the use of knowledge within the informal economy. Focusing on the micro-scale of informal family businesses, this article documents the case of a recyclables shop in Mexico City, and explores how knowledge is used to develop innovative practices
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Policy space for informal sector grassroots innovations: towards a ‘bottom-up’ narrative International Development Planning Review (IF 2.071) Pub Date : 2021-01-01 Fayaz Ahmad Sheikh ⶁ,Saradindu Bhaduri
Of late, innovation studies have taken a keen interest in exploring various components of informal sector grassroots innovations. While recognising the immense contribution of this scholarship in sensitising researchers and generating awareness, its connections to policymaking remain inadequate. In the absence of comprehensive policy discussions, the policy makers have often attempted to extrapolate
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Childcare and academia: an intervention International Development Planning Review (IF 2.071) Pub Date : 2020-10-01 Jessica Hope,Charlotte Lemanski,Tanja Bastia,Nina Moeller,Paula Meth,Glyn Williams
In this Viewpoint, we engage with the everyday politics of academia - specifically, how caring for young children continues to affect academic work and career trajectories in ways that could be better mitigated. This viewpoint piece collates the personal accounts of six development scholars who discuss their experiences of negotiating both academia and childcare, covering fieldwork, funding, career
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Viewpoint Informal settlement is not a euphemism for ‘slum’: what’s at stake beyond the language? International Development Planning Review (IF 2.071) Pub Date : 2020-07-28 Kim Dovey,Tanzil Shafique,Matthijs van Oostrum,Ishita Chatterjee
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Splintering disaster: relocating harm and remaking nature after the 2011 floods in Bangkok International Development Planning Review (IF 2.071) Pub Date : 2020-06-01 Danny Marks, Eli Elinoff
In the wake of the costly 2011 floods, the city of Bangkok struggled to respond to the water inundating Thailand’s major hub. In response, Thai leaders primarily blamed the external forces of natur...
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Shit, shit, every where (or: notes on the difficulties of classifying shits) International Development Planning Review (IF 2.071) Pub Date : 2020-06-01 Indrawan Prabaharyaka
This article is an experiment. Here I wrestle to retell and redescribe my experience of working and studying water and sanitation and, while I am doing that, I grow a form of reflexivity that inter...
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Asia’s changing cities: water, climate and power in the transformation of urban spaces International Development Planning Review (IF 2.071) Pub Date : 2020-06-01 Amrita Daniere, Vanessa Lamb
This introduction to the special issue lays out the key themes and arguments across the five research papers and Viewpoint. Foremost, we highlight how by bringing this research across diverse Asian...
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Hydrosocial practice in an urbanising floodplain: local management and dilemmas of beneficial flooding International Development Planning Review (IF 2.071) Pub Date : 2020-06-01 Vanessa Lamb
In Southeast Asia, how flooding is named or studied is not only a matter of fact, but distinctions of flooding as ‘beneficial’ or ‘disaster’ elicit specific reactions from city management, governme...
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Social differentiation and access to clean water: a case study from Bac Ninh, Vietnam International Development Planning Review (IF 2.071) Pub Date : 2020-06-01 Lisa Drummond, Hue Thi Van Le
Bac Ninh, a province adjacent to the Hanoi Capital Region of Vietnam, has long been renowned for its centuries-old craft villages. Today, Bac Ninh is becoming renowned for the toxic environments pr...
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Nature Based Solutions for urban water management in Asian cities: integrating vulnerability into sustainable design International Development Planning Review (IF 2.071) Pub Date : 2020-06-01 Michelle Kooy, Kathryn Furlong, Vanessa Lamb
Nature Based Solutions (NBS) for urban water management seek to harness natural processes and (re)connect diverse flows in the urban water cycle for increased ecological sustainability. Developed i...
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‘Water when you need it’: drawing lessons from practices in Hubli-Dharwad, India International Development Planning Review (IF 2.071) Pub Date : 2020-06-01 Asavari Devadiga
In this paper, I highlight the nuances of the water delivery process through a critical analysis of local municipal practices in India. Drawing upon insights from planning theory, I take a deeper l...
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Co-producing the right to fail: resilient grassroot cooperativism in a Chilean informal settlement International Development Planning Review (IF 2.071) Pub Date : 2020-05-13 Martín Arias-Loyola,Francisco Vergara-Perucich
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Adapting to informality: multistory housing driven by a co-productive process and the People’s Plans in Metro Manila, Philippines International Development Planning Review (IF 2.071) Pub Date : 2020-04-22 Jakub Galuszka
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How development corridors interact with the Sustainable Development Goals in East Africa International Development Planning Review (IF 2.071) Pub Date : 2020-04-22 Brock Bersaglio, Charis Enns, Ramson Karmushu, Masalu Luhula, Alex Awiti
Investment in infrastructure and industry has reached record levels across the global South, leading to claims that the world is at the dawn of a fourth industrial revolution. This claim is reflect...
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Scholarship and policy on urban densification: perspectives from city experiences International Development Planning Review (IF 2.071) Pub Date : 2020-04-22 Philip Harrison, Garth Klein, Alison Todes
Urban compaction and densification policy is widely advocated internationally, including for countries in the global South. Such advocacy draws on ‘best practice’ case examples, but these are frequ...
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Policymaking in data poor countries: measuring the Lebanese political agenda in a new data set International Development Planning Review (IF 2.071) Pub Date : 2020-04-22 Mounir Mahmalat
This article introduces a novel data set on legislative activity in Lebanon covering all important primary and secondary legislation between 1950 and 2016. It analyses the data set based on agenda-...
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Investigating community constructed rural water systems in Northwest Cameroon: leadership, gender and exclusion International Development Planning Review (IF 2.071) Pub Date : 2020-04-22 Henry Tantoh, Tracey Mckay
Many rural communities in sub-Saharan Africa have a long history of community cooperation and local-led development projects harnessed to improve the delivery of water services. This study examined...
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Informal rental housing in Colombia: an essential option for low-income households International Development Planning Review (IF 2.071) Pub Date : 2020-04-22 Melanie Lombard, Jaime Hernandez-Garcia, Alexander Lopez Angulo
Around the world, rental housing is frequently seen as secondary to home ownership; yet it plays a crucial role in many countries. In particular, rental housing in urban informal neighbourhoods has a critical but consistently overlooked role in housing the most vulnerable households in the Global South. If better policy and practice are to be pursued, there is a need for improved data on rental housing
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Balancing the images of place Intentional and unintentional place-making by a large infrastructure project: the case of Tangerang LIVE 2020 International Development Planning Review (IF 2.071) Pub Date : 2020-04-22 Delphine, Patrick Witte, Tejo Spit
In recent decades, many metropolitan cities have invested in large-scale infrastructure projects to position themselves strategically as competitors in the global economy. Most of these projects vi...
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Professor Sylvia Chant, 1958–2019 International Development Planning Review (IF 2.071) Pub Date : 2020-04-01 Cathy McIlwaine,Katherine V. Gough
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Keeping the business going: SMEs and urban floods in Asian megacities International Development Planning Review (IF 2.071) Pub Date : 2020-04-01 Hebe Verrest, Laerke Groennebaek, Adele Ghiselli, Mariana Berganton
Flooding presents one of the main risks to contemporary and future cities, especially those in coastal zones. Given the social–political nature and construction of urban flood risks, it is of cruci...
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Infrastructural citizenship: (de)constructing state–society relations International Development Planning Review (IF 2.071) Pub Date : 2020-04-01 Charlotte Lemanski
In this Viewpoint I introduce the analytical framework of Infrastructural Citizenship using examples from my research in contemporary South Africa. This is not a tightly defined concept but a broad...
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‘Bastard children’: unacknowledged consulting companies in development cooperation International Development Planning Review (IF 2.071) Pub Date : 2020-04-01 Pamela White
Development consulting companies are pivotal actors in bilateral projects, yet they are largely invisible in policy documents, and little researched. Their business model is a combination of ‘doing...
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‘Marginalised formalisation’: an analysis of the in/formal binary through shifting policy and everyday experiences of ‘poor’ housing in South Africa International Development Planning Review (IF 2.071) Pub Date : 2020-04-01 Paula Meth
This paper contributes to global debates over the in/formal binary through an analysis of the South African state’s provision of formal housing to residents previously living informally or insecurely. Focusing on cases within the cities of eThekwini and Msunduzi, it uses a mix of empirical data from housing beneficiaries and government officials alongside an analysis of documents to examine the processes
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Urban development as a marionette? Oil income and urban development in post-revolutionary Iran International Development Planning Review (IF 2.071) Pub Date : 2020-04-01 Seyed Navid Mashhadi Moghaddam, Mojtaba Rafieian
The effects of natural resource extraction profits on the economic growth of countries are extensively debated. Some argue that such proceeds are a curse, often referred to as ‘Dutch disease’. Othe...
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The resurgence of national development planning: how did we get back here? International Development Planning Review (IF 2.071) Pub Date : 2020-04-01 Lauchlan T. Munro
After decades in the political and ideological wilderness, national development planning has made a comeback. The number of countries with a national development plan has doubled since 2006. Given ...
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Knowledge and innovative spaces: a framework for assessment of the cultural–educational precinct in Tehran International Development Planning Review (IF 2.071) Pub Date : 2020-03-10 Reihaneh Aghamolaei, Azadeh Lak
Several countries are planning urban districts as knowledge and innovation spaces (KISs) to achieve economic and cultural goals. The literature shows that urban planning qualities such as place qua...
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Safe and inclusive cities: contesting violence International Development Planning Review (IF 2.071) Pub Date : 2020-01-01 Darshini Mahadevia,Katherine V. Gough
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Masculinities and nonviolence in contexts of chronic urban violence International Development Planning Review (IF 2.071) Pub Date : 2020-01-01 Elis Borde, Victoria Page, Tatiana Moura
This article analyses violent and nonviolent male life trajectories in contexts of chronic urban violence, exploring how masculinities and gendered socialisation influence the perpetration of viole...