“…Urban and political geographers in particular have giving increased attention to the multiple configurations of power and overlapping spaces of governance that characterise postcolonial cities (though not only them) (Schindler, 2014; Şenol, 2013; Truelove, 2019). In doing so, they have begun to problematise assumptions about who qualifies as a political agent (Kuss, 2019), to carefully examine ‘how rule [is] practiced and experienced’ (Williams and Nandigama, 2018: 9) and to recognise institutional complexity, highlighting that social institutions which may self-identify as non-political may still exercise power and wield public authority (Lund, 2006). In this paper, I follow and extend these arguments, analytically drawing on De Certeau’s (1984) Theory of Practice, to demonstrate how social institutions may draw on material and social practices that contribute to subject formation and the reproduction of territorialised authority.…”