Crisis and creativity : exploring the wealth of the African neighbourhood

TitleCrisis and creativity : exploring the wealth of the African neighbourhood
Publication TypeBook
Year of Publication2006
Series EditorP.J.J. Konings, and D.W.J. Foeken
Series titleAfrican dynamics
Issue5
Date Published2006///
PublisherBrill
Place PublishedLeiden
Publication Languageeng
ISSN Number1568-1777
KeywordsAfrica, Cameroon, Ghana, identity, neighbourhoods, social networks, Subsaharan Africa, Tanzania, Uganda, urban society
Abstract

During the current economic and political crisis in sub-Saharan Africa, urban dwellers tend to display a large measure of creativity in the invention of survival strategies, the development of social networks, and the construction of imaginative practices. This collective volume explores the importance of the urban neighbourhood in these creative processes. Two different approaches to the neighbourhood are pinpointed. The first perceives the neighbourhood as a geographical domain in which people are engaged in a variety of activities to advance their material and immaterial well-being, making use of the 'wealth' of opportunities, assets and forms of 'capital' (natural, physical, financial, human and social). The second approach sees the neighbourhood not as necessarily geographically bounded, but as created and defined by human beings. These 'neighbourhoods' may take the form of self-help organizations, associations, churches, etc. or may be based on gender, generational, ethnic and occupational identities. The two approaches do not necessarily exclude each other. The volume contains contributions on Nakuru, Kenya (Samuel Owuor & Dick Foeken), Douala, Cameroon (Piet Konings; Basile Ndjio), Kampala, Uganda (Emmanuel Nkurunziza), Kano, Nigeria (Katja Werthmann), Accra, Ghana (Deborah Pellow), Dar es Salaam, Tanzania (Eileen Moyer), Lomé, Togo (Charles Piot), Mongo, Chad (Mirjam de Bruijn), and Aioun el Atrouss, Mauritania (Kiky van Til). [ASC Leiden abstract]

IR handle/ Full text URLhttp://hdl.handle.net/1887/14740
Catalogue link

http://opc-ascl.oclc.org/PPN?PPN=293291748

Citation Key3709