Governing Ourselves for Sustainability: Everyday Ingenuities in the Governance of Water Infrastructure in the Informal Settlements of Dar es Salaam

被引:0
|
作者
Francis Dakyaga
Abubakari Ahmed
Mavis Lepiinlia Sillim
机构
[1] Technische Universität Dortmund,Faculty of Spatial Planning
[2] Ardhi University,Institute of Human Settlement Studies
[3] SD-Dombo University of Business and Integrated Development Studies,West African Centre for Sustainable Rural Transformation (WAC
[4] SD-Dombo University of Business and Integrated Development Studies,SRT)
[5] Ardhi University,Department of Planning, Faculty of Planning and Land Management
[6] Technische Universität Dortmund,Department of Urban and Regional Development Planning and Management
来源
Urban Forum | 2021年 / 32卷
关键词
Urban politics; Everyday practices; Urban sustainability; Self-governance; Informal settlements; Sub-Saharan Africa;
D O I
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中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Everyday ingenuities have gained hegemony in urban governance scholarship in the Global South, especially regarding the informal settlements of sub-Saharan Africa, where public water services are limited. Within the global commitment to sustainability, through the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), this article explores how non-state actors (water service providers) develop and sustain water infrastructure (provide, manage water systems for continued availability) in the informal settlements, through the lens of the everyday ingenuities and governance for sustainability framework, and a qualitative research approach. The study realized the involvement of individuals and group of actors in water infrastructure governance. The actors self-mobilized resources and develop low-cost water infrastructure systems. The actors engaged in a gamut of actions, transactions, clientelist (broker and clients’ relationships), and interactions (buying and selling of water, networking, production, cooperation, partnerships) to manage water infrastructure, the practices were guided by unwritten rules and regulations, and not independent of state actors’ interactions, but formed and developed through the relations between state and non-state water service providers. The findings suggest that water infrastructures in the informal settlements are developed and sustained through the everyday act of inventing, repetitive self-actions, ordering and disordering of the rules and mechanisms, among the inter-depending actors (producers and resellers of water), and their interactional relationship with the state water utility provider (DAWASA).
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页码:111 / 129
页数:18
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