Despite the growing recognition of the utility of Marxist theories of primitive accumulation for understanding the current ‘neoliberal’ phase of capitalist development, there is a lack of in-‐depth research on the particular dynamics that ‘accumulation by dispossession’ assumes at the urban scale. This is a problem compounded by the lack of dialogue between Marxist theorists of primitive accumulation and critical urban geographers researching neoliberalism at the urban scale, particularly in the context of the Global South. This thesis addresses these shortcomings through an in-‐depth empirical case study of struggles over urban space in Accra, Ghana. Situated within a critical urban theory approach, it draws on a range of quali...
Thesis: S.M., Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Department of Architecture, 2014.Cataloged from...
Abstract The economic hardships experienced by African countries in the late 1970s forced many of th...
Ghana is one of a few African countries where more people now reside in cities than in the countrysi...
This article draws on original empirical research in Accra, Ghana to explore the particular dynamics...
Recent studies indicate that market-driven logics increasingly inform the governing of African citie...
African cities increasingly aspire global recognition and this has prompted a rapid transformation o...
This article draws on Asef Bayat’s theory of “quiet encroachment” to analyse the political agency of...
The ascendance of the so-called global middle class—characterized as young, ambitious, highly-creden...
Building upon recent ethnographic work with land chiefs in Kinshasa, this paper explores some of the...
The end of colonial power marked the advent of new kinds of professional figures and postcolonial ex...
The growth of informal settlements across the Global South has generated concomitant empirical resea...
This study is focused on urban transformation of Accra, the capital city of Ghana, under neoliberali...
This is a study of globalization in an African City. Beginning in the late 1980s, geographers, socio...
Metropolitan local governments in Ghana, most especially the Accra Metropolitan Assembly (AMA), have...
This study explores how slum governance leads to oppression and resistance in Accra. The study area ...
Thesis: S.M., Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Department of Architecture, 2014.Cataloged from...
Abstract The economic hardships experienced by African countries in the late 1970s forced many of th...
Ghana is one of a few African countries where more people now reside in cities than in the countrysi...
This article draws on original empirical research in Accra, Ghana to explore the particular dynamics...
Recent studies indicate that market-driven logics increasingly inform the governing of African citie...
African cities increasingly aspire global recognition and this has prompted a rapid transformation o...
This article draws on Asef Bayat’s theory of “quiet encroachment” to analyse the political agency of...
The ascendance of the so-called global middle class—characterized as young, ambitious, highly-creden...
Building upon recent ethnographic work with land chiefs in Kinshasa, this paper explores some of the...
The end of colonial power marked the advent of new kinds of professional figures and postcolonial ex...
The growth of informal settlements across the Global South has generated concomitant empirical resea...
This study is focused on urban transformation of Accra, the capital city of Ghana, under neoliberali...
This is a study of globalization in an African City. Beginning in the late 1980s, geographers, socio...
Metropolitan local governments in Ghana, most especially the Accra Metropolitan Assembly (AMA), have...
This study explores how slum governance leads to oppression and resistance in Accra. The study area ...
Thesis: S.M., Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Department of Architecture, 2014.Cataloged from...
Abstract The economic hardships experienced by African countries in the late 1970s forced many of th...
Ghana is one of a few African countries where more people now reside in cities than in the countrysi...