Marginalisation, Contestation, and Change in South Asian Cities
Nida Kirmani(Editor)
Oxford University Press,Pakistan
Published on 1. June 2022
Book
Paperback/Softback
224 pages
978-969-734-012-5 (ISBN)
Description
The expansion of neoliberal forms of accumulation and the growing flows of goods, ideas, and human beings between and within global networks is having profound effects on the urban experience in South Asia, creating new possibilities as well as challenges, particularly for marginalised citizens. While powerholders struggle to create 'world-class' and 'smart' cities to attract capital, the vast majority of urban inhabitants are forced to cope with multiple forms of insecurity. For many urban citizens, the city is both a site of promise as well as precarity. As such, there is an urgent need for scholars to reflect on the social, political, economic, and ecological impacts of these changes on South Asian cities and their citizens.
This book approaches the city as a site of multiple contestations and contradictions and aims to highlight struggles over space, resources, identities, and meaning taking place within South Asian cities. It explores the ways in which the adoption of neoliberal models of development have impacted South Asian cities and their citizens, focusing on both Indian and Pakistani cities, highlighting similarities and differences in urban change on both sides of the border.
This book approaches the city as a site of multiple contestations and contradictions and aims to highlight struggles over space, resources, identities, and meaning taking place within South Asian cities. It explores the ways in which the adoption of neoliberal models of development have impacted South Asian cities and their citizens, focusing on both Indian and Pakistani cities, highlighting similarities and differences in urban change on both sides of the border.
More details
Language
English
Place of publication
Oxford
Pakistan
Product notice
Paperback (trade)
Unsewn / adhesive bound
Illustrations
18 Illustrations
Dimensions
Height: 217 mm
Width: 142 mm
Thickness: 11 mm
Weight
254 gr
ISBN-13
978-969-734-012-5 (9789697340125)
Copyright in bibliographic data is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or its licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Classification
Person
Nida Kirmani is Associate Professor of Sociology at the Lahore University of Management Sciences (LUMS), where she has been teaching since 2011. She served as a Research Fellow with the Religions and Development Research Programme at the University of Birmingham (2007-10) and has published widely on issues related to gender, Islam, women's movements, and development and urban studies in India and Pakistan. She completed her PhD from the University of Manchester. Kirmani is the author of Questioning 'the Muslim Woman': Identity and Insecurity in an Urban Indian Locality (Routledge 2013). Her current research focuses on urban violence, gender, and insecurity in Lyari, Karachi.
Content
- Introduction: Urban Transformations in South Asia: Views from Below
- 1: Shahana Rajani and Heba Islam: Entangling the 'Global City': Everyday Resistance in Gadap, Karachi
- 2: Hashim bin Rashid and Zainab Moulvi: The case of LDA City: How a Public-Private Partnership Fractured Farmers' Resistance in Lahore
- 3: Helena CermeƱo: Looking at the City from Below: Contribution of 'Access' Approach and 'Cityscapes' in Amritsar
- 4: Noman Ahmed: Bolstering Security by Erecting Barriers and Restricting Access: The Case of Karachi
- 5: Asad Sayeed and Kabeer Dawani: Mafia Domination or Victim of Neoliberalism? Contextualising the Woes of Karachi's Transport Sector
- 6: Rohit Negi and Prerna Srigyan: In the Time of Toxic Air: Environmental Knowledges, Collaborations, and Justice in Delhi
- 7: Shahana Sheikh, Sonal Sharma, and Subhadra Banda: Electoral Politics in Delhi's Informal Settlements: Contestation, Negotiation, and Exclusion
- 8: Pinky Chandran and Kabir Arora: City Boundaries and Waste Frontiers: Exploring Nayandahalli, where Waste is Transformed into Resource
- 9: Muntasir Sattar
: 'Studying in the Mahol': Middle-class Spaces and Aspiring Middle-class Male Subjects in Urban Pakistan
- Afterword: South Asian Cities in the New Millennium
- Index