2020
DOI: 10.1111/tran.12370
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Infrastructural citizenship: The everyday citizenships of adapting and/or destroying public infrastructure in Cape Town, South Africa

Abstract: This paper develops infrastructural citizenship as an analytical framework that bridges geography's sub‐disciplinary silos. While urban geography promotes infrastructure as a core lens for understanding the city, recognising that political struggles are mediated through infrastructure, discourses of citizenship are rarely employed. Similarly, while political and development geography promote citizenship as vital in understanding socio‐political life, often framed by citizen‐led action to secure basic rights an… Show more

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Cited by 87 publications
(95 citation statements)
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References 51 publications
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“…The valuation of water is often tangled with infrastructural considerations; social scientists have addressed intricacies of when, how, and why water is used (Gleick, 2003 ), commodified (or not) (Bakker, 2007; Teodoro, 2018 ), and how this toggles with the costs and realities of infrastructural decision making (Von Schnitzler, 2013 ; Beresford, 2020 ). In South Africa, citizenship (one's position vis-a-vis the State) is created through a person's relationship with water and sanitation infrastructures, inter alia (Lemanski, 2019 ). These approaches provide a useful conceptual bridge into sanitation, as infrastructural regimes (e.g., flush toilets) often require the use of water for sanitation.…”
Section: Anthropological Contributions To Global Washmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The valuation of water is often tangled with infrastructural considerations; social scientists have addressed intricacies of when, how, and why water is used (Gleick, 2003 ), commodified (or not) (Bakker, 2007; Teodoro, 2018 ), and how this toggles with the costs and realities of infrastructural decision making (Von Schnitzler, 2013 ; Beresford, 2020 ). In South Africa, citizenship (one's position vis-a-vis the State) is created through a person's relationship with water and sanitation infrastructures, inter alia (Lemanski, 2019 ). These approaches provide a useful conceptual bridge into sanitation, as infrastructural regimes (e.g., flush toilets) often require the use of water for sanitation.…”
Section: Anthropological Contributions To Global Washmentioning
confidence: 99%
“… 30. Lemanski, C (2020), “Infrastructural citizenship: the everyday citizenship of adapting and/or destroying public housing in Cape Town, South Africa”, Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers Vol 45, No 3, pages 589–605. …”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Silver (2014) discusses 'material improvising' in Accra, as a more permanent way to extend networked systems. Lemanski (2019) deploys the concept of 'infrastructural citizenship' to foreground the relationship between political identity and infrastructural practices in Cape Town. These pieces show how, as Howe et al (2016: 553) point out, "infrastructural solidity, in material and symbolic terms, is more apparent than actual".…”
Section: Next Generation Planningmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…While some scholars are critical of the ways in which structural inequities are reproduced through practices of retrofit and extension, there is important work which examines how urban socio-spatial relations are reimagined through replacing, that is, through the re-inscription of a building's history and identity (Lehrer, 2006). Another growing body of work considers how such processes are infused with care, solidarity, and resistanceprogressive and even radical social and political practices (Lemanski, 2019;Silver, 2014). Mattern (2018) defines care as everything that we do to continue and repair our world so that we can live in it as well as possible.…”
Section: Next Generation Planningmentioning
confidence: 99%
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