Pages

Friday, January 14, 2022

Neoliberalism and the state in the African city: informality, accumulation and the rebirth of a Ugandan market [Scholarly Article - Critical African Studies, December 2021]

Title:
Neoliberalism and the state in the African city: informality, accumulation and the rebirth of a Ugandan market
 
Author:
Graeme Young
University of Glascow, United Kingdom
 
Published:
Critical African Studies, 1 December 2021
 
Abstract:
Rapid urbanization and the transformations that it brings are raising urgent questions about understanding the African city. This article stresses the value of viewing urban development through a critical lens that focuses on questions surrounding neoliberalism and the state, highlighting how such an approach can provide important insights into the dynamics of informal economic activity. Examining the recent history of Kisekka Market in Kampala, Uganda, it argues that development processes in the informal economy, even when apparently neutral or ostensibly empowering for the urban poor, facilitate forms of accumulation and dispossession that result in the consolidation of political and economic power. The destruction and rebirth of Kisekka Market, despite its changing politics, has consistently benefitted wealthier vendors and external investors, threatened to displace poorer traders and served the interests of President Museveni, the National Resistance Movement (NRM) and their allies. Exploring these dynamics demands addressing traditional political economy questions that must serve as the foundation for analysing the institutions, structures and processes shaping contemporary African cities.