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Informal settlement upgrading in Cape Town's Hangberg : local government, urban governance and the 'Right to the City'

Thesis (MPhil)--Stellenbosch University, 2011.

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Main Author: Fieuw, Walter Vincent Patrick
Other Authors: Khan, Firoz
Format: Thesis
Language:en_ZA
Published: Stellenbosch : Stellenbosch University 2011
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access_status_str Open Access
author Fieuw, Walter Vincent Patrick
author2 Khan, Firoz
author_browse Fieuw, Walter Vincent Patrick
Khan, Firoz
author_facet Khan, Firoz
Fieuw, Walter Vincent Patrick
author_sort Fieuw, Walter Vincent Patrick
collection Thesis
dc_rights_str_mv Stellenbosch University
description Thesis (MPhil)--Stellenbosch University, 2011.
format Thesis
id oai:scholar.sun.ac.za:10019.1/17903
institution Stellenbosch University (South Africa)
language en_ZA
last_indexed 2026-06-10T12:41:07.950Z
license_str Other — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from SUNScholar — Stellenbosch University Repository
publishDate 2011
publishDateRange 2011
publishDateSort 2011
publisher Stellenbosch : Stellenbosch University
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source_str SUNScholar — Stellenbosch University Repository
spelling oai:scholar.sun.ac.za:10019.1/17903 Informal settlement upgrading in Cape Town's Hangberg : local government, urban governance and the 'Right to the City' Fieuw, Walter Vincent Patrick Khan, Firoz Stellenbosch University. Faculty of Economic and Management Sciences. School of Public Leadership. Squatter settlements -- South Africa -- Cape Town Urbanization -- South Africa -- Cape Town Urban renewal -- South Africa -- Cape Town City planning -- South Africa -- Cape Town Dissertations -- Public management and planning Theses -- Public management and planning School of Public Leadership Thesis (MPhil)--Stellenbosch University, 2011. ENGLISH ABSTRACT: Integrating the poor into the fibre of the city is an important theme in housing and urban policies in post-apartheid South Africa. In other words, the need for making place for the ‘black’ majority in urban spaces previously reserved for ‘whites’ is premised on notions of equity and social change in a democratic political dispensation. However, these potentially transformative thrusts have been eclipsed by more conservative, neoliberal developmental trajectories. Failure to transform apartheid spatialities has worsened income distribution, intensified suburban sprawl, and increased the daily livelihood costs of the poor. After a decade of unintended consequences, new policy directives on informal settlements were initiated through Breaking New Ground (DoH 2004b). Local governments have nevertheless been slow to implement this new instrument despite more participatory, flexible, integrated and situational responsive policies contained therein. The City of Cape Town was one of the first applicants for Upgrading of Informal Settlements Programme (DoH 2004a, DHS 2009) funding in upgrading Hangberg’s informal settlement after effective lobbying by local civic Hout Bay Civic Association (HBCA) assisted by the Cape Town-based NGO, Development Action Group (DAG). However, in September 2010 the upgrading project came to a standstill when Metropolitan Police clashed violently with community members who allegedly broke a key agreement when building informal structures on the Sentinel Mountain firebreak. Using the case study research methodology, the study seeks to unravel the governance complexities elicited by this potentially progressive planning intervention. Four theoretical prisms are used to probe and investigate the primary case study (Hangberg) due to the different ways of ‘seeing and grappling’ and ‘narrating’ a complex tale. This is characterised by the dialectics of power and powerlessness; regime stabilisation and destabilisation; formalisation and informalisation; continuity and discontinuity. These prisms are: urban informality, urban governance, deepening democracy, and socio-spatial justice. By utilising these four theoretical prisms, the study found the Hangberg case to be atypical of development trajectories, on the one hand, and conforming to the enduring neoliberal governance logics, on the other. In the concluding chapter, the study critically engages prospects of realising post-apartheid spatialities by considering recent policy shifts and programmes with the potential of realising the poor’s ‘right to the city’. AFRIKAANSE OPSOMMING: ‘n Belangrike tema in post-apartheid behuising- en stedelike beleide is die integrasie van arm mense in die weefsel van die stad. Anders gestel, die nodigheid om plek te maak vir die ‘swart’ meerderheid in stedelike spasies wat voorheen vir ‘wittes’ uitgesonder is, is gebaseer op die uitgangspunt van regverdigheid en sosiale verandering in ‘n demokratiese bedeling. Hierdie potensiële hervormings-nosies is egter verduister deur meer konserwatiewe, neo-liberale ontwikkelings-trajekte. Die mislukte pogings om apartheids-ruimtes te omvorm, beteken dat inkomsteverdeling vererger is, wydstrekkende verstedeliking in meer intensiewe vorms voorkom, en die daaglikse lewenskoste van die armes verhoog het. Na ‘n dekade van onopsetlike gevolge is nuwe beleids-riglyne vir informele nedersettings voorgestel deur Breaking New Ground (DoH 2004a). Plaaslike owerhede was egter tot dusver traag om hierdie nuwe instrument te implementeer, ten spyte daarvan dat meer deelnemende, buigsame, geïntegreerde en situasioneel-aanpasbare beleide daarin vervat is. Die Stad Kaapstad was een van die eerste applikante vir Upgrading of Informal Settlements Programme (DoH 2004b, DHS 2009) befondsing om Hangberg se informele nedersetting te opgradeer, nadat effektiewe druk uitgeoefen is deur die Hout Bay Civic Association (HBCA), met ondersteuning van die NRO, Development Action Group (DAG), wat in Kaapstad gebaseer is. Maar in September 2010 het die opgradering-projek tot stilstand gekom nadat die Metropolitaanse Polisie gewelddadig met gemeenskapslede gebots het, omdat die gemeenskap na bewering ‘n belangrike ooreenkoms gebreek het deur informele strukture op die brandstrook te bou. Deur van die gevalstudie navorsing-metodologie gebruik te maak, beoog hierdie studie om die bestuurskompleksiteite te ontrafel wat deur hierdie potensiële omvormde beplannings-intervensie uitgelok is. Vier teoretiese prismas word gebruik om die primêre geval (Hangberg) te ondersoek in die lig van die verskillende maniere waarop hierdie komplekse narratief gesien kan word. Dit word gekenmerk deur die dialekte van mag en magteloosheid; stabilisasie en destabilisasie van die staatsbestel; formalisering en deformalisering; samehangendheid en onsamehangendheid. Die prismas is: stedelike informaliteit, stedelike bestuur, verdieping van demokrasie en sosio-ruimtelike regverdigheid. Deur van hierdie vier prismas gebruik te maak, wys die studie tot watter mate die Hangberg geval aan die een kant atipies tot ontwikkelings-trajekte is, en aan die ander kant konformeer tot die voortdurende neo-liberale bestuurslogika. In die slothoofstuk, is die studie krities bemoei met die vooruitsig om die post-apartheid-stad te realiseer deur huidige beleidsveranderinge en programme te ondersoek met die vergrootglas op hul potensiaal vir transformasie en om die armes se ‘reg tot die stad’ te bevorder. Masters 2011-11-17T13:15:42Z 2011-12-05T13:09:49Z 2011-11-17T13:15:42Z 2011-12-05T13:09:49Z 2011-12 Thesis http://hdl.handle.net/10019.1/17903 en_ZA Stellenbosch University application/pdf Stellenbosch : Stellenbosch University
spellingShingle Squatter settlements -- South Africa -- Cape Town
Urbanization -- South Africa -- Cape Town
Urban renewal -- South Africa -- Cape Town
City planning -- South Africa -- Cape Town
Dissertations -- Public management and planning
Theses -- Public management and planning
School of Public Leadership
Fieuw, Walter Vincent Patrick
Informal settlement upgrading in Cape Town's Hangberg : local government, urban governance and the 'Right to the City'
title Informal settlement upgrading in Cape Town's Hangberg : local government, urban governance and the 'Right to the City'
title_full Informal settlement upgrading in Cape Town's Hangberg : local government, urban governance and the 'Right to the City'
title_fullStr Informal settlement upgrading in Cape Town's Hangberg : local government, urban governance and the 'Right to the City'
title_full_unstemmed Informal settlement upgrading in Cape Town's Hangberg : local government, urban governance and the 'Right to the City'
title_short Informal settlement upgrading in Cape Town's Hangberg : local government, urban governance and the 'Right to the City'
title_sort informal settlement upgrading in cape town s hangberg local government urban governance and the right to the city
topic Squatter settlements -- South Africa -- Cape Town
Urbanization -- South Africa -- Cape Town
Urban renewal -- South Africa -- Cape Town
City planning -- South Africa -- Cape Town
Dissertations -- Public management and planning
Theses -- Public management and planning
School of Public Leadership
url http://hdl.handle.net/10019.1/17903
work_keys_str_mv AT fieuwwaltervincentpatrick informalsettlementupgradingincapetownshangberglocalgovernmenturbangovernanceandtherighttothecity