Urban imaginaries: funding mega infrastructure projects in Lagos, Nigeria

被引:36
|
作者
Adama, Onyanta [1 ]
机构
[1] Stockholm Univ, Stockholm, Sweden
关键词
Urban imaginaries; Modernity; Neoliberalism; Governmentality; Mega infrastructure; Lagos; Nigeria;
D O I
10.1007/s10708-016-9761-8
中图分类号
P9 [自然地理学]; K9 [地理];
学科分类号
0705 ; 070501 ;
摘要
In today's globalized world, mega infrastructure projects have emerged as one of the most popular strategies for attracting private capital and repositioning cities on the competitive landscape. The Lagos Megacity Project (LMCP) was launched to address a longstanding infrastructure crisis and to reinvent Lagos as a modern megacity. Using the LMCP as a case study, the paper examined the challenges facing the funding of mega infrastructure projects. Special attention is given to how capital is mobilized, the kinds of alliances or networks found and what gets prioritized. The paper observed that the alliance formed between the federal, Lagos and Ogun state governments to mobilize public funds quickly unraveled largely due to disputes traceable to the apportioning of fiscal and political responsibilities and the distribution of functions between the different tiers of government. Under the LMCP, disputes emerged between the federal government and the Lagos State Government (LSG) over who was responsible for what. A history of opposition politics and a highly politicized resource allocation system further made cooperation between the two particularly difficult. Furthermore, the LMCP signalled a renewed drive by the LSG to attract private investments through public-private partnership. The paper noted a host of problems but crucially there is a preference for elite projects, a practice that is reinforcing socio-spatial exclusion and confirms the persistent inequalities that accompany neoliberal and modernist projects. At the broadest level, the paper points to how modernist projects are fractured or undermined by specific ideologies and practices.
引用
收藏
页码:257 / 274
页数:18
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] URBAN GREEN INFRASTRUCTURE AND SOCIAL COHESION IN LAGOS METROPOLIS, NIGERIA
    Dipeolu, Adedotun
    Taiwo, Amos
    Adebara, Temitope
    ACTA STRUCTILIA, 2024, 31 (02) : 123 - 149
  • [2] USER PREFERENCE IN URBAN INFRASTRUCTURE PROVISION (A CASE OF ILUPEJU, LAGOS, NIGERIA)
    Famuyiwa, Funlola
    Otegbulu, Austin C.
    Adewunmi, Yewande
    Farinloye, Oluranti
    PROCEEDINGS OF THE SECOND INTERNATIONAL POSTGRADUATE CONFERENCE ON INFRASTRUCTURE AND ENVIRONMENT, VOL 2, 2010, : 413 - 421
  • [3] Urban Markets in Lagos, Nigeria
    Ikioda, Faith Ossy
    GEOGRAPHY COMPASS, 2013, 7 (07): : 517 - 526
  • [4] Factors influencing residents' attitude towards urban green infrastructure in Lagos Metropolis, Nigeria
    Dipeolu, Adedotun Ayodele
    Ibem, Eziyi Offia
    Fadamiro, Joseph Akinlabi
    Fadairo, Gabriel
    ENVIRONMENT DEVELOPMENT AND SUSTAINABILITY, 2021, 23 (04) : 6192 - 6214
  • [5] Determinants of residents' preferences for Urban Green infrastructure in Nigeria: Evidence from Lagos Metropolis
    Dipeolu, Adedotun Ayodele
    Ibem, Eziyi Offia
    Fadamiro, Joseph Akinlabi
    URBAN FORESTRY & URBAN GREENING, 2021, 57
  • [6] Factors influencing residents’ attitude towards urban green infrastructure in Lagos Metropolis, Nigeria
    Adedotun Ayodele Dipeolu
    Eziyi Offia Ibem
    Joseph Akinlabi Fadamiro
    Gabriel Fadairo
    Environment, Development and Sustainability, 2021, 23 : 6192 - 6214
  • [7] Stakeholder Engagement in Mega Transport Infrastructure Projects
    Erkul, Mehmet
    Yitmen, Ibrahim
    Celik, Tahir
    WORLD MULTIDISCIPLINARY CIVIL ENGINEERING-ARCHITECTURE-URBAN PLANNING SYMPOSIUM 2016, WMCAUS 2016, 2016, 161 : 704 - 710
  • [8] Social cleansing projects and urban imaginaries of perfection
    Carmona Ochoa, Gabriela
    Narvaez Tijerina, Adolfo Benito
    CONTEXTO-REVISTA DE LA FACULTAD DE ARQUITECTURA UNIVERSIDAD AUTONOMA DE NUEVO LEON, 2018, 12 (17): : 83 - 98
  • [9] Funding large rural water infrastructure projects
    White, S. (stephanie.white@hdrinc.com), 1600, American Water Works Association (97):
  • [10] Funding large rural water infrastructure projects
    White, S
    Oamek, G
    Martinek, J
    JOURNAL AMERICAN WATER WORKS ASSOCIATION, 2005, 97 (04): : 30 - 32