Abstract

There is an increasing recognition of the need to understand and address risks of various kinds in African cities. However, there have been very few explicit examinations of the way in which the specific characteristics of African urbanisation and urbanism drive risk, or the way in which responses to risk should take these characteristics into account. This paper presents a critical review of the key features of African urban experiences, and analyses the implications for the creation and reduction of diverse risks, from the everyday to the extensive. It argues that the physical forms, social structures, economic pathways, and governance systems of cities on the continent shape their risk profiles. Of particular importance are the nature of spatial expansion, the demographic profiles of cities, and the prevalence of informal economies and settlements; while the reform of governance systems will be critical to enable risk reduction. The paper concludes that urban development actors need to consider the consequences of their actions for risk, while risk reduction practitioners will need to engage with all elements of urban development, including informality, urban poverty, infrastructure and service provision, land management, and local governance capacity.

Highlights

  • In an increasingly urbanized world, cities and their inhabitants are facing significant human and economic losses from disasters

  • This paper presents a critical review of African urbanism and urban change, and how these influence exposure to hazards of various types, and contribute to the vulnerability of individuals, households and communities

  • Living in urban areas can create new risks and pressures for women, where these are compounded through poverty and informality, African urbanisms may offer opportunities to shift problematic power relations and reduce gendered risks

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Summary

Introduction

In an increasingly urbanized world, cities and their inhabitants are facing significant human and economic losses from disasters. There is little research into the myriad political, governance, economic, social, and cultural changes taking place in African towns and cities, and still less consideration of the implications for the generation, accumulation and reduction of risk.

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