2016
DOI: 10.1177/0042098016668105
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Powering sub-Saharan Africa’s urban revolution: An energy transitions approach

Abstract: This paper develops a geographic understanding of urban energy transitions in subSaharan African towns and cities. In doing so this paper seeks to critically reßect on the value and limits of urban transitions analysis as a framework for understanding energy networks beyond the largely integrated systems across the Global North. We explore how these potentials and deÞcits can be addressed by examining promising developments across a series of debates in urban studies that can help sensitise this approach to en… Show more

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Cited by 55 publications
(23 citation statements)
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References 75 publications
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“…Despite the latest investments, the number of people without access seems to be rising -not decreasing -due to a combination of natural population growth, increase in energy exports, as well as an intensification in demand through urbanization (IEA, 2014). This reinforces the argument of various authors who think that addressing sub-Saharan Africa's energy future will require a joint consideration of Africa's ongoing 'urban revolution' (Parnell and Pieterse, 2014;Silver and Marvin, 2017).…”
Section: Introductionsupporting
confidence: 79%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…Despite the latest investments, the number of people without access seems to be rising -not decreasing -due to a combination of natural population growth, increase in energy exports, as well as an intensification in demand through urbanization (IEA, 2014). This reinforces the argument of various authors who think that addressing sub-Saharan Africa's energy future will require a joint consideration of Africa's ongoing 'urban revolution' (Parnell and Pieterse, 2014;Silver and Marvin, 2017).…”
Section: Introductionsupporting
confidence: 79%
“…that energy transitions will have the power to flatten the spatial unevenness of energy systems. In contrast, the work of Silver and Marvin (2017) highlights how urban transitions are infiltrated by contestation over infrastructure and service provision. Given the historical patterns embedded in contemporary energy systems and other economic assumptions about the roll-out of efficient electricity markets (e.g.…”
Section: Spatial Differentiation and Uneven Development: Convergence mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Researchers have sought to explicate the everyday experiences and logics of so-called 'informal' urban infrastructure, attending to the range of nodes, actors, and connections and disconnections to various forms of so-called 'formal' infrastructure. Such work shows how infrastructures have become layered by multiple and partial infrastructures including different coverage, technologies, operations, logics and ownerships (Anand, 2011;Chattopadhyay, 2012;Graham and McFarlane, 2014;Silver and Marvin, 2017). Literature on Southern urban infrastructure has also called attention to new possibilities for social organising, ownership and power relations both with and outside of the state.…”
Section: Urban Studies Beyond the Infrastructure Idealmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…My argument is that, by paying attention to geographies of knowledge production, and processes of differentiation and disassembly, social science energy research has the potential to inform and critically extend the social science literature (primarily in human geography) on space and society. [32,63,64]. The point, however, is that the geographies of knowledge through which these fields emerged continue to loom large: in the sets of concerns through which research is framed, the theoretical and conceptual frameworks adopted, and methodological considerations such as presumptions about key actors.…”
Section: Travelling Beyond the Map: Realizing The Full Potential Of Smentioning
confidence: 99%