Every few years, Karachi floods during the summer monsoon. The flooding brings latent manoeuvrings by political actors looking to establish their hold over the city to the surface. Politicians, urban administrators, and relevant state and non-state institutions blame historical planning failures, informal and illegal constructions, institutional conflict, incapable municipal governance, and widespread corruption for the flooding. They move quickly to establish authority and consolidate power while offering ‘fixes’. Eviction drives against ‘illegal settlements’ built along storm-water drains, heavy taxes, fines, and demolitions of non-conforming constructions, institutional reforms, budget allocations, and project approvals for new infrastru...
This article looks at the post?disaster context of Lower Sindh, a region devastated by super floods ...
This article explores the normalisation of urban flooding through two distinct sets of securitised p...
Pakistan is prone to disasters and these disasters altogether cannot be stopped; however, their ill ...
Every few years, Karachi floods during the summer monsoon. The flooding brings latent manoeuvrings b...
Karachi’s history has left a city riven by tribal, ethnic and sectarian divisions, which exhibits di...
On which evidence is planning based and which planning documents are taken as basis for decision-mak...
This paper explores the politics of the 2014 floods in the contentious and conflict-prone Indian sta...
This paper uses governance of water infrastructure in two settlements of Baltistan as an entry point...
Urban flooding poses significant challenges to cities in Southeast Asia including loss of life, huma...
Between November and December 2015, the southern Indian city of Chennai (alongside the northern coas...
This dissertation looks beyond narratives of the chaotic urban south to examine the politics of city...
This paper approaches the floods of 2015 in Chennai, Tamil Nadu, India, as the consequence of polici...
“Cites are an enigma – overcrowding, soaring land prices, intense competition, traffic congestions, ...
This thesis challenges the dominant approach to examining flooding through a case study of the 2011 ...
Pakistan was hit by catastrophic floods in 2010, which inundated infrastructure spread over 100,000 ...
This article looks at the post?disaster context of Lower Sindh, a region devastated by super floods ...
This article explores the normalisation of urban flooding through two distinct sets of securitised p...
Pakistan is prone to disasters and these disasters altogether cannot be stopped; however, their ill ...
Every few years, Karachi floods during the summer monsoon. The flooding brings latent manoeuvrings b...
Karachi’s history has left a city riven by tribal, ethnic and sectarian divisions, which exhibits di...
On which evidence is planning based and which planning documents are taken as basis for decision-mak...
This paper explores the politics of the 2014 floods in the contentious and conflict-prone Indian sta...
This paper uses governance of water infrastructure in two settlements of Baltistan as an entry point...
Urban flooding poses significant challenges to cities in Southeast Asia including loss of life, huma...
Between November and December 2015, the southern Indian city of Chennai (alongside the northern coas...
This dissertation looks beyond narratives of the chaotic urban south to examine the politics of city...
This paper approaches the floods of 2015 in Chennai, Tamil Nadu, India, as the consequence of polici...
“Cites are an enigma – overcrowding, soaring land prices, intense competition, traffic congestions, ...
This thesis challenges the dominant approach to examining flooding through a case study of the 2011 ...
Pakistan was hit by catastrophic floods in 2010, which inundated infrastructure spread over 100,000 ...
This article looks at the post?disaster context of Lower Sindh, a region devastated by super floods ...
This article explores the normalisation of urban flooding through two distinct sets of securitised p...
Pakistan is prone to disasters and these disasters altogether cannot be stopped; however, their ill ...