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The influence of insurgency on socially responsive urban development : a proposed informal recycling facility for the informal cardboard recyclers of the Durban CBD, South Africa.

Lining the streets and the interstitial spaces of the developing cities of the modern world is an
emerging citizenship that exists and thrives in the in-between. These are the new urbanites,
the Insurgent Citizens; a socio spatial product of the rapid urbanisation processes that have
shaped and will continue to shape the urban landscape. The physical make up of concrete
and glass that forms the fantastic images of cityness and modernity house the minority
population, the haves. However, in the spaces left behind, in the alley ways and on the
pavements in so called residual spaces, this new insurgent citizenship is growing. Having
been left out of the planning processes that define these city imageries, within exclusionary
constructs these citizens are redefining how the city functions as they stake their claims to be
active participants within the metabolism of the modern city. This conflicting rationality of
what a city is, and for whom it shall serve is effected by the minority striving to modernise
and the majority striving to survive within the same physical environment.
There are countless research efforts established to disseminate cityness for the minority of
haves; however this dissertation posits itself within the construct of the have-nots and their
rights to the city and therefore their socio-spatial rights to redefine it. This redefinition of
cityness is established as a means to support their livelihood strategies to contest their
conditions of spatial and economic poverty, as shall be defined herein. This insurgent
citizenship is not survivalist nor merely informal, but rather an active social agent contesting
the exclusionary processes that continue to define the cities of the developing world.
It is the aim of this dissertation to establish the historical and current construct under which
these socio-spatiality’s exist. Thus by identifying these strategies by which these insurgents
survive and contest these realities, this dissertation will explore informal recycling as a means
of insurgency. By understanding the global and local phenomenon of informal recycling;
considering the environmental and socio-economic benefits it yields, this dissertation seeks to
uncover strategies by which inclusive developments can be adopted to facilitate this insurgent
practice. The objective of this dissertation is to establish a grassroots up architectural design
solution for the informal recyclers of the Durban CBD, South Africa. / Thesis (M.Arch.)-University of KwaZulu-Natal, Durban, 2013.

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:netd.ac.za/oai:union.ndltd.org:ukzn/oai:http://researchspace.ukzn.ac.za:10413/9698
Date January 2013
CreatorsStols, Dennis-lee.
ContributorsHorner, B.
Source SetsSouth African National ETD Portal
Languageen_ZA
Detected LanguageEnglish
TypeThesis

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