Uneven development, politics and governance in urban Africa: An analytical literature review

This paper considers the foundations of contemporary African urban economies and how these intersect with the evolution of urban politics

Abstract

This paper considers the foundations of contemporary African urban economies and how these intersect with the evolution of urban politics, carving a route through a wide range of existing literatures relevant to the politics and political economy of African urban development. It considers the economic and demographic drivers of urbanisation in Africa and their consequences for urban restructuring and uneven development, before turning to the forms of urban politics that have emerged alongside, responded to and also helped shape these urban economic developments. In distilling the African urban politics literature, it examines the politics of urban clientelism, collective action and street politics, the urban dimensions of electoral and party politics, the urban politics of war and conflict and, finally, the politics of urban governance and service delivery.

As well as mapping the “state of the discipline” in the field of African urban politics, the paper also aims to historically and geographically contextualise the politics of Africa’s urbanisation, identify key gaps in the literature and associated debates, and indicate potential directions for future research on urban politics and political economy in Africa.

This work is an output of the African Cities Research Consortium

Citation

Collord, M., Goodfellow, T. Asante, L. A. (2021). Uneven development, politics and governance in urban Africa: An analytical literature review. ACRC Working Paper 2021-02. Manchester, UK: African Cities Research Consortium, The University of Manchester. Available at: www.african-cities/org

Uneven development, politics and governance in urban Africa: An analytical literature review

Updates to this page

Published 9 November 2011