Abstract
Much attention has been paid to township tourism in South Africa, a practice of tourism that emerged in Apartheid South Africa with different organised tours catering for governmental officials, faith-based groups and anti-apartheid activists. In democratic South Africa, township tourism has developed into a mainstream tourism activity, and operators now offer township tours, township stays and other tourist activities in townships across rural and urban South Africa. Township tourism has also been one central empirical pillar of the relatively new research area of slum tourism, addressing tourism in slums and areas of relative urban poverty across the globe. Based on recent preliminary empirical research in Johannesburg, this paper shows that slum tourism can now also be observed in areas other than townships in South Africa, including perceived ‘no-go areas’ in inner-city Johannesburg. The expansion of slum tourism beyond townships in Johannesburg points to an increasingly complex picture of urban poverty in South Africa. It also allows reflections on the role of slum tourism in poverty alleviation and urban regeneration, responding to and addressing ‘territorial stigma’ and other related symbolic aspects of poverty. Analysing the motivations and perspectives of tour operators of some of these new tours, the paper finds that the new slum tourism in South Africa is pursued in order to serve as an urban development and regeneration tool from below. It responds to an absence of action or perceived failure to respond to poverty by urban policy, and its potential lies in particular in addressing invisibility, overcoming territorial stigma and empowerment of the urban poor.
Highlights
Township tourism has a long history in South Africa
The early township tours formed the nucleus of the emerging township tourism operations and industry of democratic South Africa since the early 1990s (Dondolo 2002; Rogerson 2004; Pirie 2007; Frenzel 2012)
There are a range of publications discussing township tourism in South Africa, and a central focus has been the question whether this form of tourism can support economic development in townships (Ramchander 2007; Rogerson 2008; Koens 2012)
Summary
Township tourism has a long history in South Africa. Its origins lie in the tours of government officials, faith-based groups and anti-apartheid activists into the townships that had become, since the 1970s, a focal point of anti-apartheid struggle and activism. While South Side Chicago might not get visited, inner-city Johannesburg, parts of which are still conceived of as no-go areas and fulfill all criteria of advanced marginality, of extreme territorial stigma, see tours operating in them and tourism being considered as development options for them. This prompts the question why slum tourism occurs in particular places and how tourism relates to different aspects of their territorial stigma?. A bank donated a significant amount of money to Dlala Nje
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