Cookies

We use cookies to ensure that we give you the best experience on our website. By continuing to browse this repository, you give consent for essential cookies to be used. You can read more about our Privacy and Cookie Policy.


Durham Research Online
You are in:

War and city-making in Somalia : property, power and disposable lives.

Bakonyi, Jutta and Chonka, Pete and Stuvoy, Kirsti (2019) 'War and city-making in Somalia : property, power and disposable lives.', Political geography., 73 . pp. 82-91.

Abstract

Rapid urbanisation in Somalia, as in many other war-torn countries, is driven by in-migration of displaced people who are often amassed in camps. Although such camps become institutionalised sites of exclusion where ‘bare life’ is generated and disposed, they are also characterised by socially messy and continuously evolving relations of space, power, violence and displacement. The article draws on fieldwork with displaced people in Somali cities to analyse claims to property and (often violent) competition to uphold them in contestation for sovereignty. Comparing two cities, Mogadishu and Bosaaso, we show how a broad range of international and local actors, including displaced people themselves, negotiate (urban) property and establish relations that guide and foster political authority, while rendering the lives and livelihoods of displaced people precarious and insecure. In property, politics and the economy intersect, and property relations are therefore subject to struggles for both power and profit. We underscore how sovereign power produces spaces of indistinction, but emphasise that property as an analytical category contributes to understandings of sovereignty. Furthermore, propertying as social practice draws attention to the way sovereignty emerges and is connected to the market. This enables the differentiations of forms of sovereignty and draws attention to how it is negotiated, openly challenged or silently undermined.

Item Type:Article
Full text:(VoR) Version of Record
Available under License - Creative Commons Attribution.
Download PDF
(1118Kb)
Status:Peer-reviewed
Publisher Web site:https://doi.org/10.1016/j.polgeo.2019.05.009
Publisher statement:© 2019 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Ltd. This is an open access article under the CC BY license.
Date accepted:20 May 2019
Date deposited:11 June 2019
Date of first online publication:05 June 2019
Date first made open access:11 June 2019

Save or Share this output

Export:
Export
Look up in GoogleScholar