On whose land is the city to be built?: farmers, owners and the city land question in Beira city, Mozambique

TitleOn whose land is the city to be built?: farmers, owners and the city land question in Beira city, Mozambique
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication2020
AuthorsM. Shannon, K. Otsuki, A. Zoomers, and M.M.A. Kaag
Secondary TitleUrban studies
Pagination[1-17]
Date Published2020
Publication Languageeng
KeywordsMozambique, urban agriculture, urban planning, urbanization
Abstract

A new era of global interventionism in African cities is emerging. The implications of which for existing claims to urban space are poorly understood. This is particularly true for the claims of farmers. Despite being a ubiquitous feature of many African cities, urban agriculture broadly exists in a conceptual limbo between rurality and urbanity, largely invisible to urban governance and substantive scholarschip. Based on the case of Beira, Mozambique, in the article, we make urban agriculture empirically and conceptually visible within the context of emerging debates on the urban land question in Africa. Through a historical-political analysis, we demonstrate how urban farming has constituted a district feature of Beira's urbanism, which has evolved amidst successive and contradictory state-land regimes. Moving to the present day, we demonstrate how a new urban regime has emerged out of a coalition of municipal leaders and international donors with the aim of erasing al traces of urban agriculture from the city to urban 'development'. The findings demonstrate that there is a need for a better understanding of the manifold claims to urban space, outside of slum urbanism alone, in contemporary land rights debates. We conclude by arguing that there is a need for substantive land rights agenda that transcends the prescriptive categories of urbanism and rurality by focusing instead on the universal land question.

DOI10.1177/0042098020929237
Citation Key10745