Congolese refugees' 'right to the city' and urban (in)security in Kampala, Uganda




Eveliina Lyytinen

PublisherRoutledge

2015

Journal of Eastern African Studies

JEAS

9

4

593

611

19

1753-1055

1753-1055

DOIhttps://doi.org/10.1080/17531055.2015.1116142

http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/17531055.2015.1116142



The concept of the ‘right to the city’ (RTC), originally developed by Lefebvre,

refers to the idea that justice is embedded in social and spatial processes, and

accordingly cities are spaces of inequality and resistance. In this paper,

Congolese refugees’ RTC is examined with regard to their city of exile,

Kampala, Uganda. The analysis is based on extensive qualitative research

conducted during 2010–2011. The notion of RTC is understood to signify

refugees’ right to access and occupy urban space. This study also acknowledges

and reinterprets the essentially Lefebvrian elements of appropriation and

participation. Appropriation of space is featured in refugees’ discourses on how

to transform insecure urban areas into protective spaces. Refugees’ participation

in decision-making regarding their formal protection is analysed as a collective,

community-based right argued for in different forms of resistance.




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