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CITY OF NON‐EQUIVALENTS: Making, Maintaining and Disrupting Customary Attachments to Land in Port Vila, Vanuatu

In this article I describe how a permanent underclass is being inadvertently created in a South Pacific city. I use Descola's idea of equivalence in human relations to explain urban tenure and evictions in the postcolonial South Pacific city of Port Vila. Vanuatu is a nation of 82 islands. Its...

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Published in:International journal of urban and regional research 2023-11, Vol.47 (6), p.995-1012
Main Author: Day, Jennifer
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description In this article I describe how a permanent underclass is being inadvertently created in a South Pacific city. I use Descola's idea of equivalence in human relations to explain urban tenure and evictions in the postcolonial South Pacific city of Port Vila. Vanuatu is a nation of 82 islands. Its archipelagic geography segregates most people's autochthonous lands, preventing ready access to the national capital. Port Vila, then, is a city of non‐citizens of the urban space: by accident of birth, a small number of people now control the land where virtually all poor migrants to the capital will live. This article describes how two non‐equivalent relations—production and protection—feature prominently in the ways that people talk about tenure insecurity. In sum, these non‐equivalent relations form the basis of how people relate to each other in terms of urban land occupancy. The pervasiveness of non‐equivalence indicates a fundamental difference between denizens of Pacific cities, whose urban policies will need to adapt to account for its presence. A right to the city may look different in places where non‐equivalence is at the very stamba (foundation) of how the city is made.
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source EconLit s plnými texty; International Bibliography of the Social Sciences (IBSS); Wiley-Blackwell Read & Publish Collection; PAIS Index; Worldwide Political Science Abstracts; Sociological Abstracts
subjects Accidents
Cities
custom
Descola
dispossession
Equivalence
eviction
Evictions
Forces and relations of production
Geography
Human relations
Insecurity
Islands
Land
Low income groups
Migrants
Noncitizens
Occupancy
Pacific
Port Vila
possession
Postcolonialism
Underclass
Urban areas
Urban policy
urbanization
Vanuatu
title CITY OF NON‐EQUIVALENTS: Making, Maintaining and Disrupting Customary Attachments to Land in Port Vila, Vanuatu
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