ABSTRACT

This book brings together insights from leading urban scholars and explicitly develops the connections between infrastructure and citizenship.

It demonstrates the ways in which adopting an ‘infrastructural citizenship’ lens illuminates a broader understanding of the material and civic nature of urban life for both citizens and the state. Drawing on examples of housing, water, electricity and sanitation across Africa and Asia, chapters reveal the ways in which exploring citizenship through an infrastructural lens, and infrastructure through a citizenship lens, allows us to better understand, plan and govern city life. The book emphasises the importance of acknowledging and understanding the dialectic relationship between infrastructure and citizenship for urban theory and practice. This book will be a useful resource for researchers and students within Urban Studies, Geography, Development Studies, Planning, Politics, Architecture and Sociology.

chapter |7 pages

Introduction

1The infrastructure of citizenship

chapter 1|14 pages

Infrastructural citizenship

Spaces of living in Cape Town, South Africa 1

chapter 3|21 pages

The politics of urban sanitation

Making claims to the city

chapter 4|20 pages

Enframing citizenship

Social housing and ontological orientations in Johannesburg

chapter 5|20 pages

Traveling technologies

Infrastructure, ethical regimes and the materiality of politics in South Africa

chapter 6|19 pages

Water, housing and (in)formality in Kitwe, Zambia

Infrastructure, citizenship and urban belonging

chapter |3 pages

Conclusion

Infrastructures of citizenship