7 December 2017

Urban Displacement and Resettlement in Zimbabwe: The Paradoxes of Propertied Citizenship.

ARTICLE

The latest publication from Amanda Hammar, Director of the Centre of African Studies, is an article in the December issue of African Studies Review entitled: Urban Displacement and Resettlement in Zimbabwe: The Paradoxes of Propertied Citizenship.


The article examines what urban displacement and resettlement can reveal about the nature of, and co-constitutive relationships among, property, authority, and citizenship. It focuses on an unusual case in Bulawayo, Zimbabwe, where long-term illegal squatters living under constant threat of violent displacement by various local and national authorities were formally resettled by the Bulawayo City Council on peri-urban plots with houses. What surfaces are some of the paradoxes of propertied citizenship and of attaining seemingly “proper” lives in conditions of sustained marginality, a result that is not entirely unexpected when impoverished squatters are resettled far outside the frame of the city and its possibilities.