Changing Space, Changing City: Johannesburg after apartheid - Open Access selection

Changing Space, Changing City: Johannesburg after apartheid - Open Access selection

Changing Space, Changing City: Johannesburg after apartheid - Open Access selection

Changing Space, Changing City: Johannesburg after apartheid - Open Access selection

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Overview

As the dynamo of South Africa’s economy, Johannesburg commands a central position in the nation’s imagination, and scholars throughout the world monitor the city as an exemplar of urbanity in the global South. This book offers detailed empirical analyses of changes in the city’s physical space, as well as a host of chapters on the character of specific neighbourhoods and the social identities being forged within them. Informing all of these is a consideration of underlying economic, social and political processes shaping the wider Gauteng province. A mix of respected academics, practising urban planners and experienced policymakers offer compelling overviews of the rapid and complex spatial developments that have taken place in Johannesburg since the end of apartheid, along with tantalising glimpses into life on the streets and behind the high walls of this diverse city. The book has three sections. Section A provides an overview of macro spatial trends and the policies that have influenced them. Section B explores the shaping of the city at district and suburban level, revealing the peculiarity of processes in different areas. This analysis elucidates the larger trends, while identifying shifts that are not easily detected at the macro level. Section C is an assembly of chapters and short vignettes that focus on the interweaving of place and identity at a micro level.
With empirical data supported by new data sets including the 2011 Census, the city’s Development Planning and Urban Management Department’s information system, and Gauteng City-Region Observatory’s substantial archive, the book is an essential reference for planning practitioners, urban geographers, sociologists, and social anthropologists, among others.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781868148134
Publisher: Wits University Press
Publication date: 10/01/2014
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 656
File size: 48 MB
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About the Author

Peter Ahmad is the senior manager for metropolitan planning in the City of Cape Town, South Africa.
Graeme Gotz is the director of research at the Gauteng City-Region Observatory in Johannesburg
Alison Todes is a professor of urban and regional planning in the School of Architecture and Planning at the University of the Witwatersrand in Johannesburg.
Chris Wray was a senior systems analyst and manager at the Gauteng City-Region Observatory in Johannesburg

Table of Contents

1 Materialities, subjectivities and spatial transformation in Johannesburg Philip Harrison, Graeme Gotz, Alison Todes and Chris Wray 2 The ‘thin oil of urbanisation’? Spatial change in Johannesburg and the Gauteng city-region Graeme Gotz, Chris Wray and Brian Mubiwa 3 Poverty and inequality in the Gauteng city-region David Everatt 4 The impact of policy and strategic spatial planning Alison Todes 5 Tracking changes in the urban built environment: An emerging perspective from the City of Johannesburg Peter Ahmad and Herman Pienaar 6 Johannesburg’s urban space economy Graeme Gotz and Alison Todes 7 Changes in the natural landscape Maryna Storie 8 Informal settlements Marie Huchzermeyer, Aly Karam and Miriam Maina 9 Public housing in Johannesburg Sarah Charlton 10 Transport in the shaping of space Mathetha Mokonyama and Brian Mubiwa 11 Gated communities and spatial transformation in Greater Johannesburg Karina Landman and Willem Badenhorst 12 Between fixity and flux: Grappling with transience and permanence in the inner city Yasmeen Dinath 13 Are Johannesburg’s peri-central neighbourhoods irremediably ‘fluid’? Local leadership and community building in Yeoville and Bertrams Claire Bénit-Gbaffou 14 The wrong side of the mining belt? Spatial transformations and identities in Johannesburg’s southern suburbs Philip Harrison and Tanya Zack 15 Soweto: A study in socio-spatial differentiation Philip Harrison and Kirsten Harrison 16 Kliptown: Resilience and despair in the face of a hundred years of planning Hilton Judin, Naomi Roux and Tanya Zack 17 Alexandra Philip Harrison, Adrian Masson and Luke Sinwell 18 Sandton Central, 1969–2013: From open veld to new CBD? Keith Beavon and Pauline Larsen 19 In the forest of transformation: Johannesburg’s northern suburbs Alan Mabin 20 The north-western edge Neil Klug, Margot Rubin and Alison Todes 21 The 2010 World Cup and its legacy in the Ellis Park Precinct: Perceptions of local residents Aly Karam and Margot Rubin 22 Transformation through transportation: Some early impacts of Bus Rapid Transit in Orlando, Soweto Christo Venter and Eunice Vaz 23 Footprints of Islam in Johannesburg Yasmeen Dinath, Yusuf Patel and Rashid Seedat 24 Being an immigrant and facing uncertainty in Johannesburg: The case of Somalis Samadia Sadouni 25 On ‘spaces of hope’: Exploring Hillbrow’s discursive credoscapes Tanja Winkler 26 The Central Methodist Church Christa Kuljian 27 The Ethiopian Quarter Hannah le Roux 28 Urban collage: Yeoville Naomi Roux 29 Phantoms of the past, spectres of the present: Chinese space in Johannesburg Philip Harrison, Khangelani Moyo and Yan Yang 30 The notice Caroline Wanjiku Kihato 31 Inner-city street traders: Legality and spatial practice Puleng Makhetha and Margot Rubin 32 Waste pickers/informal recyclers Sarah Charlton 33 The fear of others: Responses to crime and urban transformation in Johannesburg Teresa Dirsuweit 34 Black urban, black research: Why understanding space and identity in South Africa still matters Nqobile Malaza
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