
Melissa García
Associate senior lecturer

The frontlines of contested urbanism : Mega-projects and mega-resistances in Dharavi
Author
Summary, in English
Currently, there appears to be an unhealthy disjunction between grand expectations and acknowledged reality in the face of urban transformations underway throughout the world. Drawing on the "right to the city" discourses, adopting a Lefebvrian approach to the production of space, and a critical regionalist approach to housing and the built environment, the article explores the conceptual analytical neologism of contested urbanism, where the struggle for bottom-up, inclusive development processes push against political hand market pressures towards becoming a world-class city. Dharavi, at the heart of Mumbai, India, is at the frontline of oppositional practices confronting neoliberal, futuristic Dubai-style mega-projects focused on capital accumulation, elite consumption, slum clearance, and deregulated realestate speculation. Building upon a three-week academic studio exercise in situ, the confrontational power dynamics that shape people's access to housing and redevelopment are depicted here as exemplar of a wider struggle over social justice, where Dharavi emerges as an eminent yet paradoxical example of a universal expression of contested spatial form in the Global South.
Publishing year
2011-09
Language
English
Pages
295-326
Publication/Series
Journal of Developing Societies
Volume
27
Issue
3-4
Document type
Journal article
Publisher
SAGE Publications
Topic
- Human Geography
Keywords
- contested urbanism
- Dharavi
- production of space
- right to the city
Status
Published
ISBN/ISSN/Other
- ISSN: 0169-796X