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dc.contributor.advisorPurcell, Darren
dc.contributor.authorLe Roux, Lené
dc.date.accessioned2023-03-21T20:24:05Z
dc.date.available2023-03-21T20:24:05Z
dc.date.issued2023-05-12
dc.identifier.urihttps://hdl.handle.net/11244/337140
dc.description.abstractPlace theory in geography has largely been a northern scholarly endeavor. Yet there is much to learn about place-making in global south cities. Southern urban scholars argue that understanding cities of and from the vantage point of global south, significantly expands urban scholarship in a way that northern-derived theory cannot do. My research experiments with two growing bodies of literature to study the making of a southern place. Drawing from postcolonial and southern urban theory, I use a process of theory unbundling (Lawhon and Le Roux, 2020) to provincialize relational place-making (Pierce, Martin and Murray, 2011). My empirical case studies the spatial practices and logics of place-making by people who live and work in the streets and public spaces in Johannesburg, South Africa. In experimenting with theory unbundling as a tool to dislocate northern-derived theory, I find that relational place-making cannot travel south as is, because, how power and democracy is conceptualized in northern literature is empirically different in a southern place. The negotiatory tactics of how public space is shared but also claimed for private gain, and how marginalized people’s behaviors are monitored and controlled, foregrounds what I call the staying power from being in place, and that place-making depends far more on what is permissible than what is lawful. I use and expand on an existing southern urban concept, ‘permissions’ (Lawhon, Pierce and Makina, 2017), to understand place-making when it falls in the liminal space between state law and order and unlawful, unregulated spatial practices. Through these findings I make room in urban scholarship to further research spatial practices and logics that occur outside of the operating systems of the modern state - underpinned by democratic values attached to private property and a rights-based approach to accessing the city.en_US
dc.languageenen_US
dc.subjectgeographyen_US
dc.subjectplace-makingen_US
dc.subjectsouthern urban theoryen_US
dc.subjectJohannesburgen_US
dc.titleConfigurations of a southern place: a postcolonial, southern urban inquiry into place-making in Norwood, Johannesburg.en_US
dc.contributor.committeeMemberSmith, Laurel
dc.contributor.committeeMemberHarris, John
dc.contributor.committeeMemberMullenbach, Lauren
dc.date.manuscript2023-03-19
dc.thesis.degreePh.D.en_US
ou.groupCollege of Atmospheric and Geographic Sciences::Department of Geography and Environmental Sustainabilityen_US
shareok.orcid0000-0003-4838-0981en_US
shareok.nativefileaccessrestricteden_US


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