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Housing for the Urban Poor: From Local Action to Global Networks

Subject Area City Planning, Spatial Planning, Transportation and Infrastructure Planning, Landscape Planning
Term from 2011 to 2015
Project identifier Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG) - Project number 195400445
 
The challenge to adequately house the urban poor Is Increasingly understood as a mafter of structural and institutional arrangements. The research will be based on this more radical notion of housing that is in contrast to simple efficiency and technical concerns. It implies that the transformation in housing policy and practice is taking place beyond the local arena and involves multi-scale strategies. Furthermore, the research aims at analyzing and interpreting these multi-level housing processes In terms of participatory governance and the related integration of civil society. According to the applicant's own studies the emerging new forms of civil society involvement in local decision making processes tend to be internationally networked, issue-based, power- and knowledge-based. Many scholars, however, either limit their research to multi-actor arrangements in a particular locality or confine their analysis to transnational movements without taking into account the relevance of locality. A third line of analysis remains largely untouched: The relevance of local action to construct networks {proximity) that are not restricted to the city but transcend local relationship-building to global grassroots networks {connectivity). The hypothesis is that the transformed housing process does not only influence policy and actors on various levels but brings about a new system of transformed power positions and assertiveness of the urban poor vis-ä-vis outside actors. This will be made explicit by analyzing proximity and Connectivity of various urban associations. Cases are associations supported by the Community Organizations Development Institute (CODI) in Thailand and federations affiliated to the Shack/Slum Dwellers Intemational (SDI). The focus is on various levels of their relationship-building between India. Thailand and South Africa. This research does not intend to provide answers whether these networks are democratic, accountable or transparent in terms of a normative understanding of good governance or social capital. Instead, we seek to make a contribution to the wider literature on housing. The aim is to understand the transformative housing process as a system working from local action towards global networks.
DFG Programme Research Grants
 
 

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