Abstract:
The bulk of urban studies in sub-Saharan Africa has, hitherto, focused on the impacts of
structural adjustment programmes on urban productivity and citizen welfare. However,
little is known about the dynamics (Mbiba & Huchzermeyer, 2002: 114) of the structural
gaps between the stated policy prescriptions and implementation practices, on one hand,
and on the other, between the policy practices and lived experiences of ordinary residents
in the marginalised urban spaces in developing countries that neoliberal economic
structural reforms have engendered. Meanwhile the dominant perspectives on the nature
and meaning of “‘peri-urban’” have intensified instead of stemming the crises of
managing increasingly contested urban frontiers in the poorer countries (Mbiba &
Huchermeyer, 2002: 114; Simon, et al., 2004; Lombard, 2016). Using Harvey’s (2003)
revised and extended Marxist perspective of “primitive accumulation by dispossession”
on jambanja, the study critically engages with the “multiple realities” (Giddens, 1984)
of radically transformed peri-urban landscapes in a case study of Harare. The study
deploys a mixed method strategy to capture multiple data sets through semi-structured
interviews, focus group discussions and biographical accounts (Creswell & Brown, 1992;
Mouton, 2003: 196) across different contexts of the ‘peri-urban’ in Harare. These
contexts range from Zimbabwe’s abandoned neoliberal structural reform programme
(Bond & Manyanya, 2003; Mbiba, 2017a: 8-9) to the country’s elitist policy projects of
jambanja and Operation Murambatsvina (Moyo, 2013a; 2013b) post-2000. Drawing on
the lived experiences of purposively selected town planners and ordinary peri-urban
residents, the study builds conceptual blocks to bridge the gaps between the official
policy prescriptions and the everyday life experiences of intended beneficiary ordinary
residents. The study concludes that the emerging palimpsest peri-urban interface in sub Saharan Africa can be productive sites for understanding the dynamics of informalised The bulk of urban studies in sub-Saharan Africa has, hitherto, focused on the impacts of
structural adjustment programmes on urban productivity and citizen welfare. However,
little is known about the dynamics (Mbiba & Huchzermeyer, 2002: 114) of the structural
gaps between the stated policy prescriptions and implementation practices, on one hand,
and on the other, between the policy practices and lived experiences of ordinary residents
in the marginalised urban spaces in developing countries that neoliberal economic
structural reforms have engendered. Meanwhile the dominant perspectives on the nature
and meaning of “‘peri-urban’” have intensified instead of stemming the crises of
managing increasingly contested urban frontiers in the poorer countries (Mbiba &
Huchermeyer, 2002: 114; Simon, et al., 2004; Lombard, 2016). Using Harvey’s (2003)
revised and extended Marxist perspective of “primitive accumulation by dispossession”
on jambanja, the study critically engages with the “multiple realities” (Giddens, 1984)
of radically transformed peri-urban landscapes in a case study of Harare. The study
deploys a mixed method strategy to capture multiple data sets through semi-structured
interviews, focus group discussions and biographical accounts (Creswell & Brown, 1992;
Mouton, 2003: 196) across different contexts of the ‘peri-urban’ in Harare. These
contexts range from Zimbabwe’s abandoned neoliberal structural reform programme
(Bond & Manyanya, 2003; Mbiba, 2017a: 8-9) to the country’s elitist policy projects of
jambanja and Operation Murambatsvina (Moyo, 2013a; 2013b) post-2000. Drawing on
the lived experiences of purposively selected town planners and ordinary peri-urban
residents, the study builds conceptual blocks to bridge the gaps between the official
policy prescriptions and the everyday life experiences of intended beneficiary ordinary
residents. The study concludes that the emerging palimpsest peri-urban interface in sub Saharan Africa can be productive sites for understanding the dynamics of informalised The bulk of urban studies in sub-Saharan Africa has, hitherto, focused on the impacts of
structural adjustment programmes on urban productivity and citizen welfare. However,
little is known about the dynamics (Mbiba & Huchzermeyer, 2002: 114) of the structural
gaps between the stated policy prescriptions and implementation practices, on one hand,
and on the other, between the policy practices and lived experiences of ordinary residents
in the marginalised urban spaces in developing countries that neoliberal economic
structural reforms have engendered. Meanwhile the dominant perspectives on the nature
and meaning of “‘peri-urban’” have intensified instead of stemming the crises of
managing increasingly contested urban frontiers in the poorer countries (Mbiba &
Huchermeyer, 2002: 114; Simon, et al., 2004; Lombard, 2016). Using Harvey’s (2003)
revised and extended Marxist perspective of “primitive accumulation by dispossession”
on jambanja, the study critically engages with the “multiple realities” (Giddens, 1984)
of radically transformed peri-urban landscapes in a case study of Harare. The study
deploys a mixed method strategy to capture multiple data sets through semi-structured
interviews, focus group discussions and biographical accounts (Creswell & Brown, 1992;
Mouton, 2003: 196) across different contexts of the ‘peri-urban’ in Harare. These
contexts range from Zimbabwe’s abandoned neoliberal structural reform programme
(Bond & Manyanya, 2003; Mbiba, 2017a: 8-9) to the country’s elitist policy projects of
jambanja and Operation Murambatsvina (Moyo, 2013a; 2013b) post-2000. Drawing on
the lived experiences of purposively selected town planners and ordinary peri-urban
residents, the study builds conceptual blocks to bridge the gaps between the official
policy prescriptions and the everyday life experiences of intended beneficiary ordinary
residents. The study concludes that the emerging palimpsest peri-urban interface in sub Saharan Africa can be productive sites for understanding the dynamics of informalised party-state institutions, political patronage and violence in reproducing urban space.
Thus, a reimagining of the peri-urban interface in contemporary sub-Saharan Africa
should harness the multiple voices, struggles and experiences in everyday life of residents
towards broadening urban theory.