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Greener pastures of home: an ethnographic study on everyday sustainable practices in Nyanga, Cape Town

Most contemporary urban development in cities of the global South is responding to rapid urbanisation caused by prospects of employment opportunities and improved quality of life. Research in the field of sustainability in cities of the global South mainly focuses on economic and social development...

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Main Author: Lukas, Megan
Other Authors: Daya, Shari
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Department of Environmental and Geographical Science 2021
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access_status_str Open Access
author Lukas, Megan
author2 Daya, Shari
author_browse Daya, Shari
Lukas, Megan
author_facet Daya, Shari
Lukas, Megan
author_sort Lukas, Megan
collection Thesis
description Most contemporary urban development in cities of the global South is responding to rapid urbanisation caused by prospects of employment opportunities and improved quality of life. Research in the field of sustainability in cities of the global South mainly focuses on economic and social development goals. However, there is an emerging sense that an appreciation of ordinary, everyday practices at the level of the community is important for developing a nuanced understanding of what sustainability might be in Southern cities. There is agreement on the need to pay attention to social and cultural practices in urban sustainability literature; yet relatively little research in the field engages closely with everyday practices at the level of neighbourhoods or communities. This is particularly true in the global South, and especially in low-income urban neighbourhoods, where developmentalist agendas dominate both academic and policy-related research. My thesis addresses this gap through an exploration of a wide range of everyday practices in a lowincome, peri-urban area, which happen to have sustainable effects. Analysing ethnographic data collected over nine months in the Cape Town township of Nyanga, I find that the desire of urban residents to create spaces of home and belonging drives behaviour that in fact has positive sustainable outcomes, yet is seldom considered in literature on sustainable cities. I argue that paying attention to how ordinary citizens ‘make home', specifically by (i) drawing on memories, (ii) developing livelihoods, and (iii) building social relations can enrich understanding not only of economic and social development but also of the complex ways in which social and environmental sustainability are already intertwined in everyday practice. Facilitating sustainable spaces in cities of the global South, therefore, requires critical engagement with the practices that are already taking place in urban residents' everyday lives.
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institution University of Cape Town (South Africa)
language eng
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license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2021
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spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/32771 Greener pastures of home: an ethnographic study on everyday sustainable practices in Nyanga, Cape Town Lukas, Megan Daya, Shari Environmental and Geographical Science Most contemporary urban development in cities of the global South is responding to rapid urbanisation caused by prospects of employment opportunities and improved quality of life. Research in the field of sustainability in cities of the global South mainly focuses on economic and social development goals. However, there is an emerging sense that an appreciation of ordinary, everyday practices at the level of the community is important for developing a nuanced understanding of what sustainability might be in Southern cities. There is agreement on the need to pay attention to social and cultural practices in urban sustainability literature; yet relatively little research in the field engages closely with everyday practices at the level of neighbourhoods or communities. This is particularly true in the global South, and especially in low-income urban neighbourhoods, where developmentalist agendas dominate both academic and policy-related research. My thesis addresses this gap through an exploration of a wide range of everyday practices in a lowincome, peri-urban area, which happen to have sustainable effects. Analysing ethnographic data collected over nine months in the Cape Town township of Nyanga, I find that the desire of urban residents to create spaces of home and belonging drives behaviour that in fact has positive sustainable outcomes, yet is seldom considered in literature on sustainable cities. I argue that paying attention to how ordinary citizens ‘make home', specifically by (i) drawing on memories, (ii) developing livelihoods, and (iii) building social relations can enrich understanding not only of economic and social development but also of the complex ways in which social and environmental sustainability are already intertwined in everyday practice. Facilitating sustainable spaces in cities of the global South, therefore, requires critical engagement with the practices that are already taking place in urban residents' everyday lives. 2021-02-04T10:16:46Z 2021-02-04T10:16:46Z 2020 2021-02-04T07:47:13Z Doctoral Thesis Doctoral PhD http://hdl.handle.net/11427/32771 eng application/pdf Department of Environmental and Geographical Science Faculty of Science
spellingShingle Environmental and Geographical Science
Lukas, Megan
Greener pastures of home: an ethnographic study on everyday sustainable practices in Nyanga, Cape Town
thesis_degree_str Doctoral
title Greener pastures of home: an ethnographic study on everyday sustainable practices in Nyanga, Cape Town
title_full Greener pastures of home: an ethnographic study on everyday sustainable practices in Nyanga, Cape Town
title_fullStr Greener pastures of home: an ethnographic study on everyday sustainable practices in Nyanga, Cape Town
title_full_unstemmed Greener pastures of home: an ethnographic study on everyday sustainable practices in Nyanga, Cape Town
title_short Greener pastures of home: an ethnographic study on everyday sustainable practices in Nyanga, Cape Town
title_sort greener pastures of home an ethnographic study on everyday sustainable practices in nyanga cape town
topic Environmental and Geographical Science
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/32771
work_keys_str_mv AT lukasmegan greenerpasturesofhomeanethnographicstudyoneverydaysustainablepracticesinnyangacapetown