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Pathways to the ‘Good Life’: Co-Producing Prosperity Research in Informal Settlements in Tanzania

Saffron Woodcraft, Emmanuel Osuteye, Tim Ndezi and Festo D. Makoba
Additional contact information
Saffron Woodcraft: Institute for Global Prosperity, University College London, UK
Emmanuel Osuteye: Development Planning Unit, University College London, UK
Tim Ndezi: Centre for Community Initiatives, Tanzania
Festo D. Makoba: Centre for Community Initiatives, Tanzania

Urban Planning, 2020, vol. 5, issue 3, 288-302

Abstract: Residents of informal settlements in urban centres in Africa are known to suffer disproportionate burdens of environmental and socio-economic inequalities and are often excluded from macro-level visions and policies that seek to make cities safer and prosperous (Birkmann, 2007; da Silva & Braulio, 2014; Dodman et al., 2013). This tension undermines the validity of orthodox, ‘expert-led’ visions, policies and measures of prosperity that are distant from the lived-experience of marginalised urban residents. Based on new empirical work with communities in three informal settlements in Dar es Salaam, Tanzania, this article argues that novel methodological and theoretical approaches to co-producing context-specific policy-relevant knowledge about pathways to prosperity (translated by the communities as maisha bora, ‘the good life’) creates inclusive spaces for both community participation in processes of urban knowledge production and critical social enquiry that can lead to grounded theory building. By co-producing both an agreed and relevant methodological approach for the study, and its subsequent documentation and analysis, this work contributes valuable empirical insights about the capacities and capabilities of local communities to shape and influence urban policy-making and in this way speaks to calls for a global urbanism (Ong, 2011; Robinson, 2016) that brings diverse voices and geographies to urban theory to better account for the diversity of urban experiences and processes found in twenty-first century cities.

Keywords: Africa; community innovation; Dar es Salaam; informal settlements; knowledge co-production; prosperity; socio-economic inequalities; Tanzania (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2020
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Persistent link: https://EconPapers.repec.org/RePEc:cog:urbpla:v5:y:2020:i:3:p:288-302

DOI: 10.17645/up.v5i3.3177

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