Abstract

The need to merge scientific with societal knowledge in addressing global sustainability challenges has deepened research on a methodology known as co-producing knowledge. It differs from participatory approaches by holding potential for solution-oriented research through sustained relationships with actors across disciplines and sectors. Although there is growing recognition that power shapes interactions in co-producing knowledge, few studies have empirically grounded articulations of power in the context of urban sustainability. This paper draws on case study projects in Africa to discern the forms of power that are navigated by actors when co-producing locally grounded knowledge and solutions for urban sustainability. The projects include: localizing norms on sustainable energy in Kampala city Uganda; confronting coastal vulnerability in Durban South Africa; and upgrading informal settlements in Stellenbosch South Africa. The forms of power across the projects are: expert power by academics; statutory power for policy-makers; and the power of locally-embedded knowledge by city residents. Navigating these forms of power is possible, if boundary objects are used in dialogues on scalable solutions to sustainability challenges. The boundary objects in the case studies are: briquettes from organic waste as alternative cooking energy for households in Kampala; a locally-appropriate costal vulnerability index for visioning sustainable climate action in Durban; and an improved Shack dwelling for improving living conditions in Stellenbosch. These boundary objects interrupted the reproduction of unequal power relations, while demonstrating how hierarchies in co-producing knowledge can be flattened.

Highlights

  • The production of knowledge on sustainable urban development is no longer a sphere for a particular science discipline (Bai et al 2010; Kasperson and Berberian 2011)

  • It is for this reason that a methodology known as co-producing knowledge has become key in merging scientific with societal knowledge to address global urban sustainability challenges like climate change, inequality and disease outbreaks

  • The peculiar features of cities in Africa, with regard to the agile nature of informal settlements, socio-demographic structures, the multiplicity of ecologies, cultural diversity and the historical drivers and scale of urbanization, bring bear the fact that the principles of co-producing knowledge vary according to contextual accounts

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Summary

Introduction

The production of knowledge on sustainable urban development is no longer a sphere for a particular science discipline (Bai et al 2010; Kasperson and Berberian 2011). Universities are increasingly being called upon to institute mechanisms for breaching silos across disciplines, and reach out to policy-makers and local communities to form partnerships that can build a foundation for collaborative research on sustainable urban development (Mori et al 2015; Dentoni and Bitzer 2015; Ziervogel et al 2016; Van der Hel 2016; Bremer et al 2019; Rodríguez et al 2019; Matthews and Papoulias 2019) It is for this reason that a methodology known as co-producing knowledge has become key in merging scientific with societal knowledge to address global urban sustainability challenges like climate change, inequality and disease outbreaks. Contextual variations matter, like Van Breda and Swilling (2018) as well as Buyana (2019), who offer emergent transdisciplinary research (ETDR) as the organizational arrangement for nurturing synergies amongst scientists, policy-makers and local residents

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