"Africa’s Urban Futures" International Conference, 15-16 September 2022
Africa’s Urban Futures
International Conference co-organized by the AVƵ and the
Swiss Society for African Studies
AVƵ, 15-16 September 2022
Organising committee: : Armelle Choplin, Didier Péclard, Stéphanie Perazzone & Higor Carvalho
Attendance is possible on site or on line. Please register for further details
Live Streaming
Urban violence. Transnational financial flows. Political crisis. Informal settlements. Smart cities. What happens to city life, urban planning or government, when urbanscapes sprawl and change beyond recognition? When new (material or digital) infrastructure emerge? When poverty strikes? When crisis comes? What happens to our definitions of a ‘city’ when these events and attendant transformations are driven from and by the Global South? These are the interrogations this two-day international conference seeks to critically assess.
Indeed, while Africa is projected to have the highest urban growth rate in the world by 2050, nearly one in two African citizens – that’s over 500 million people – already lives in cities. Long seen as ‘ungovernable’, ‘fragile’ or ‘anarchic’, due in part, to the proliferation of slums, uncontrolled urbanization, poor governance and criminal activity, African metropolises however, are also celebrated as places of cultural, infrastructural, political and social creation. African urban formations simultaneously emerge as spaces of social transformation, circulation of ideas and innovation, and the loci for potential covetousness and (societal) conflict. This international conference focuses therefore on a variety of urban-related issues emerging on the African continent in order to generate fresh insight on our urban world ‘yet to come’ (to paraphrase Abdoumaliq Simone) from a Southern urbanisms perspective that sees African cities as sites from which we can learn globally.
With the goal of making significant contributions to current debates that address the fast-changing nature of urban settings in Africa, this event is further structured around three interrelated broad themes and will feature two public side events including film screenings and discussions with the producers.
- The government of urban spaces
Research on state formation and urban centres in Africa has long been dominated by normative perspectives. Both tended to be analysed not for what they are or have become, but for what they purportedly “fail” to be in comparison to their counterparts in the Global North. These perspectives, which focus on states and cities in Africa as “weak”, “disorderly”, “fragile” or “chaotic” have come under increasing criticism thanks to a focus on day-to-day governance practices, relations and structures. Cities are indeed critical spaces for processes of state formation, where state and non-state actors contribute to the government of everyday lives, providing thereof new insight on alternative forms of social organization, government and resistance. - Urban (Afri)capitalisms
One of the most spectacular changes in African cities over the past 20 years has been the influx of new investments. This trend, which has been sustained by two decades of rapid economic growth, is especially manifest in the creation of new satellite cities built on the outskirts of capital cities. These new urban centres are generally presented as the continent’s urban future: Think of Eko Atlantic City in Lagos, Diaminadio in Dakar, Luanda-Sul in Angola. In this panel we will look at different elements of these investments: their origin, what they mean in terms of urban development, how they are perceived and appropriated on the ground, how the emergence of new urban centres changes the value of land and the dynamics of land ownership in and around them. - Imagining Africa’s urban futures
The material transformations of African cities are also the expression of new globalised or globalising imaginaries (Afropolitanism, Afrofuturism, Blackness) that should be questioned, as they suggest that the African city can also be a space for dreaming and reinventing other futures. This will be addressed in the last panel, which will concentrate on cities as spaces of imagination, technological innovation and projection to rethink Africa and more broadly our contemporary world.
Africa’s Urban Futures
PRELIMINARY PROGRAMME
Venue: AVƵ, Uni Mail, Room MR 2160
Download the Flyer (PDF)
Thursday 15 September 2022
Room MR070
10h00 Registration, coffee
10h45 Welcome by the organisers | Didier Péclard, Armelle Choplin and Stéphanie Perazzone
11h -12h30 Opening Keynote Speech, Prof. Jennifer Robinson, AVƵ College of London
12h30 –14h Lunch break
14h – 17h Panel 1: The government of urban spaces
Chair: Didier Péclard (Ծé de Genève)
Discussant: Dennis Rodgers, (Geneva Graduate Institute)
Karen Büscher (AVƵ of Ghent) and Stéphanie Perazzone (Ծé de Genève)
Laurent Fourchard (CERI-SciencesPo, Paris)
Patrick Belinga (Ծé de Genève)
Kasper Hoffmann (Copenhagen AVƵ)
17h – 17h30 Coffee break
17h30 – 19h Film: Trouble Sleep, by and with Alain Kassanda, followed by a Q&A with the film director and André Chapatte (Ծé de Genève)followed by Q&A with the film director
19h30 Conference dinner (upon invitation only)
Friday, 16 September 2022
Room MR2160
9h – 12h30 Panel 2: Urban (Afri)capitalisms
Chair: Stéphanie Perazzone (Ծé de Genève)
Discussant: Jon Schubert, (AVƵ of Basel)
Higor Carvalho (Ծé de Genève)
James Christopher Mizes (Ծé Paris-Dauphine)
Sylvia Croese (AVƵ of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg)
Momar Diongue (Ծé Cheik-Anta Diop, Dakar)
Julien Migozzi (Oxford AVƵ)
12h30 – 14h Lunch Break
14h – 17h30 Panel 3: Imagining Africa’s Futures
Chair: Armelle Choplin (Ծé de Genève)
Discussant: Katherine Gough (Loughborough AVƵ)
Liza Cirolia (African Centre for Cities, AVƵ of Cape Town)
Hervé Roquet (Ծé de Genève)
Émilie Guitard (CNRS-PRODIG, Paris)
Pauline Guinard (Ecole Normale Supérieure Paris)
Dolorès Bertrais (Ծé de Genève)
Chloé Buire (CNRS-LAM, SciencePo Bordeaux)
18h – 19h30 Concluding Keynote Speech & Film (The Tower): Prof. Filip de Boeck (AVƵ of Antwerp) & Sammy Baloji, tbc.
19h30 Conference dinner (upon invitation only)
12 juil. 2022