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Occupations as housing models: The everyday and political role of collective labour in sustaining an occupation over time

In line with calls to decolonise planning, and planning imaginaries, this dissertation takes seriously one of the most pervasive models of securing housing and connecting to basic services across the global south: the occupation of land and buildings. Emerging literature has established the everyday...

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Main Author: Fortuin, Kezia
Other Authors: Scheba, Suraya
Format: Thesis
Language:Eng
Published: Department of Environmental and Geographical Science 2025
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access_status_str Open Access
author Fortuin, Kezia
author2 Scheba, Suraya
author_browse Fortuin, Kezia
Scheba, Suraya
author_facet Scheba, Suraya
Fortuin, Kezia
author_sort Fortuin, Kezia
collection Thesis
description In line with calls to decolonise planning, and planning imaginaries, this dissertation takes seriously one of the most pervasive models of securing housing and connecting to basic services across the global south: the occupation of land and buildings. Emerging literature has established the everyday labour of survival in occupations as equally a political labour, disrupting earlier understandings of occupations as either survival strategy or political statement. Enquiring into occupations as existing models of housing provisioning, this dissertation uses the notion of ‘labour' to understand how occupations are sustained over time at their everyday and political scales. The research is informed by two years of ad-hoc engagements with, and five months of focused ethnographic fieldwork at, the Cissie Gool House building occupation in Cape Town. Limiting the study to four of the occupation's spaces of collective labour – the kitchen, the garden, the maintenance team and the security and safety team – the research finds an established system of resident-led management guided by mature strategies to respond to crisis, keep the community safe, counter criminalisation and meet community needs. Moreover, in the context of state dis-engagement and the threat of eviction, their model of resident-led management has become crucial evidence of their capacity to be engaged. This evidence is mobilised in the effort to ‘reach for the state' in the carving out of the future of the site as affordable housing. ‘Labour,' although understudied in the infrastructural turn, is useful empirically, in providing an attentive, intimate and embodied reading of southern urban planning and repair practices; conceptually, in tying together disparate bodies of literature on southern urbanism, infrastructures, repair and affect; and methodologically, in insisting on the use of the body to generate data. As such, I advocate for an embodied turn in the study of southern urban planning and repair practices.
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language Eng
last_indexed 2026-06-10T12:39:15.676Z
license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2025
publishDateRange 2025
publishDateSort 2025
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spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/40915 Occupations as housing models: The everyday and political role of collective labour in sustaining an occupation over time Fortuin, Kezia Scheba, Suraya Environmental and Geographical Science In line with calls to decolonise planning, and planning imaginaries, this dissertation takes seriously one of the most pervasive models of securing housing and connecting to basic services across the global south: the occupation of land and buildings. Emerging literature has established the everyday labour of survival in occupations as equally a political labour, disrupting earlier understandings of occupations as either survival strategy or political statement. Enquiring into occupations as existing models of housing provisioning, this dissertation uses the notion of ‘labour' to understand how occupations are sustained over time at their everyday and political scales. The research is informed by two years of ad-hoc engagements with, and five months of focused ethnographic fieldwork at, the Cissie Gool House building occupation in Cape Town. Limiting the study to four of the occupation's spaces of collective labour – the kitchen, the garden, the maintenance team and the security and safety team – the research finds an established system of resident-led management guided by mature strategies to respond to crisis, keep the community safe, counter criminalisation and meet community needs. Moreover, in the context of state dis-engagement and the threat of eviction, their model of resident-led management has become crucial evidence of their capacity to be engaged. This evidence is mobilised in the effort to ‘reach for the state' in the carving out of the future of the site as affordable housing. ‘Labour,' although understudied in the infrastructural turn, is useful empirically, in providing an attentive, intimate and embodied reading of southern urban planning and repair practices; conceptually, in tying together disparate bodies of literature on southern urbanism, infrastructures, repair and affect; and methodologically, in insisting on the use of the body to generate data. As such, I advocate for an embodied turn in the study of southern urban planning and repair practices. 2025-02-11T12:33:25Z 2025-02-11T12:33:25Z 2024 2025-02-11T12:32:08Z Thesis / Dissertation Masters Masters http://hdl.handle.net/11427/40915 Eng application/pdf Department of Environmental and Geographical Science Faculty of Science University of Cape Town
spellingShingle Environmental and Geographical Science
Fortuin, Kezia
Occupations as housing models: The everyday and political role of collective labour in sustaining an occupation over time
thesis_degree_str Master's
title Occupations as housing models: The everyday and political role of collective labour in sustaining an occupation over time
title_full Occupations as housing models: The everyday and political role of collective labour in sustaining an occupation over time
title_fullStr Occupations as housing models: The everyday and political role of collective labour in sustaining an occupation over time
title_full_unstemmed Occupations as housing models: The everyday and political role of collective labour in sustaining an occupation over time
title_short Occupations as housing models: The everyday and political role of collective labour in sustaining an occupation over time
title_sort occupations as housing models the everyday and political role of collective labour in sustaining an occupation over time
topic Environmental and Geographical Science
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/40915
work_keys_str_mv AT fortuinkezia occupationsashousingmodelstheeverydayandpoliticalroleofcollectivelabourinsustaininganoccupationovertime