Everyday states and water infrastructure: Insights from a small secondary city in Africa, Bafatá in Guinea-Bissau
A rich body of work on everyday governance and urban infrastructure has produced nuanced understandings of the situated power relations and manifold practices shaping urban infrastructure in diverse cities. However, there is little research focusing on the practices and relations of state actors, an...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Environment and planning. C, Politics and space Politics and space, 2021-03, Vol.39 (2), p.247-264 |
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Format: | Artikel |
Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | A rich body of work on everyday governance and urban infrastructure has produced
nuanced understandings of the situated power relations and manifold practices
shaping urban infrastructure in diverse cities. However, there is little
research focusing on the practices and relations of state actors, and examining
how these might shape different infrastructural configurations and relate to
broader processes of state formation. This is particularly the case for
secondary cities in Africa. This article draws on anthropological explorations
of the state and debates on local ownership in aid to examine how state
practices and relations have shaped water infrastructure in a small secondary
city (Bafatá, Guinea-Bissau), and how the state is constituted in this
process. Based on extensive ethnographic work, this research demonstrates that
in a context of aid dependency, state influence is necessarily constituted
through its relations with non-state organisations. Formal state presence
therefore depends on the subtle and erratic recognition bestowed on the state by
non-state organisations. However, local state actors continue to shape water
provision in Bafatá in fundamental ways not through following policy and
regulatory frameworks, but through their (informal) decisions, practices and
interactions with non-state organisations. Overall, it is argued that
anthropological explorations of states open our analytical lens to the mundane
ways in which states shape different types of urban infrastructure, and the ways
these practices relate to broader processes of state formation, particularly in
context where states appear elusive. |
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ISSN: | 2399-6544 2399-6552 |
DOI: | 10.1177/2399654419875748 |