State of Slum: Precarity and Informal Governance at the Margins in Accra
By (Author) Paul Stacey
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Zed Books Ltd
15th April 2019
United Kingdom
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Development studies
Housing and homelessness
Anthropology
Political science and theory
Political oppression and persecution
307.336409667
Hardback
240
Width 140mm, Height 222mm
449g
Home to eighty thousand people, Accras Old Fadama neighbourhood is the largest illegal slum in Ghana. Though almost all its inhabitants are Ghanaian born, their status as illegal squatters means that they live a precarious existence, marginalised within Ghanaian society and denied many of the rights to which they are entitled as citizens. The case of Old Fadama is far from unique. Across Africa, over half the population now lives in cities, and a lack of affordable housing means that growing numbers live in similar illegal slum communities, often in appalling conditions. Drawing on rich, ethnographic fieldwork, the book takes as its point of departure the narratives that emerge from the everyday lives and struggles of these people, using the perspective offered by Old Fadama as a means of identifying wider trends and dynamics across African slums. Central to Staceys argument is the idea that such slums possess their own structures of governance, grounded in processes of negotiation between slum residents and external actors. In the process, Stacey transforms our understanding not only of slums, but of governance itself, moving us beyond prevailing state-centric approaches to consider how even a societys most marginal members can play a key role in shaping and contesting state power.
Paul Stacey is a postdoctoral researcher in global development at the Institute for Food and Resource Economics, University of Copenhagen. He has undertaken research projects for Oxfam America, the Danish Institute for International Studies, and the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation. This is his first book.