Financial flows into Africa are being reoriented through the pervasive discourse of the ‘infrastructure gap’. I argue that the generation of new infrastructures identified as ‘alternative assets’ by global finance is also creating landscapes of opportunity for urban capital accumulation by more locally-embedded actors. Thus, as international financial flows are becoming ‘infrastructuralized’, domestic capital is increasingly ‘real-estatized’. The conceptualization of African urban economies in terms of deficits has obscured the extent to which they are also characterised by surfeits, including of certain kinds of property development and speculation, with important implications for the politics of urban accumulation, dispossession and vio...
Kenya is a widely cited case for proponents of fintech for development. This article shows how Kenya...
This introduction to our special issue addresses scholars’ failure, in recent times, to consider and...
Some of the questions that emerge from the African experiences were echoing those of capital-importi...
Financial flows into Africa are being reoriented through the pervasive discourse of the ‘infrastruct...
This article was supported by the Open Access Publication Fund of Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin.For...
In many parts of Africa, societies that are still primarily rural are experiencing accelerated urban...
Capital flight constitutes a major constraint to Africa’s efforts to fill the large and growing fina...
New private property investments in Africa’s cities are on the rise, and they often take the form of...
The costs of doing business in Africa have historically been great, but the socio-economic achieveme...
Evidence abounds to support the view that economy of sub-Saharan Africa (SSA) has been growing in re...
The main premise of this paper is that, until recently, African elites did not regulate or control f...
This article through a qualitative assessment identifies political risks confronted by FDI in infras...
Sub-Saharan Africa has urbanised at tremendous speed over the last half century, in a process that h...
This article examines different ways in which finance models have become the ruling mode of spatiali...
WP 2006-19 December 2006Although globalization was built on increased world trade, the movement of c...
Kenya is a widely cited case for proponents of fintech for development. This article shows how Kenya...
This introduction to our special issue addresses scholars’ failure, in recent times, to consider and...
Some of the questions that emerge from the African experiences were echoing those of capital-importi...
Financial flows into Africa are being reoriented through the pervasive discourse of the ‘infrastruct...
This article was supported by the Open Access Publication Fund of Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin.For...
In many parts of Africa, societies that are still primarily rural are experiencing accelerated urban...
Capital flight constitutes a major constraint to Africa’s efforts to fill the large and growing fina...
New private property investments in Africa’s cities are on the rise, and they often take the form of...
The costs of doing business in Africa have historically been great, but the socio-economic achieveme...
Evidence abounds to support the view that economy of sub-Saharan Africa (SSA) has been growing in re...
The main premise of this paper is that, until recently, African elites did not regulate or control f...
This article through a qualitative assessment identifies political risks confronted by FDI in infras...
Sub-Saharan Africa has urbanised at tremendous speed over the last half century, in a process that h...
This article examines different ways in which finance models have become the ruling mode of spatiali...
WP 2006-19 December 2006Although globalization was built on increased world trade, the movement of c...
Kenya is a widely cited case for proponents of fintech for development. This article shows how Kenya...
This introduction to our special issue addresses scholars’ failure, in recent times, to consider and...
Some of the questions that emerge from the African experiences were echoing those of capital-importi...