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33510-01 - Seminar: Gender, Health and Urbanization in Africa South of the Sahara 3 KP

Semester Frühjahrsemester 2013
Angebotsmuster einmalig
Dozierende Veit Arlt (veit.arlt@unibas.ch, BeurteilerIn)
Marc Epprecht (marc.epprecht@unibas.ch)
Allison Goebel (allison.goebel@unibas.ch)
Inhalt This course considers both historical and contemporary issues for gendered lives in urbanizing areas of Africa South of the Sahara. Using health and environments as major lenses, the course will explore: government policies and practices; international programs and regimes impacting African urbanization; rural-urban migrations and linkages; epidemics and other major health conditions, especially as related to sexual and reproductive health; housing, urban infrastructure and geographies of environmental risk; livelihoods; and urban protests and politics.
CLASS SCHEDULE

Week 1. Introduction – course outline, themes, assignments
GEDI, an African urban renewal project in historical perspective (presentation by M. Epprecht)
Reading: Freund pp. 1-106

Week 2. The historiography of urban Africa to 1980 (Epprecht)
Freund pp. 1-106

Week 3 African cities today (Goebel)
Murray and Myers: chapter 1
Freund: chapter 5
UN-Habitat 2012. State of the World’s Cities, Africa Region (http://www.unhabitat.org/categories.asp?catid=171)

Week 4 Governance, citizenship and welfare
Murray and Myers: chapters 10 and 11
Goebel, Allison 2011. “‘Our Struggle is for the Full Loaf’: Protests, Social Welfare and Gendered Citizenship in South Africa,” Journal of Southern African Studies, 37:02, 369-388.
Parnell, Susan and Edgar Pieterse 2010. “The ‘Right to the City’: Institutional Imperatives of a Developmental State” International Journal of Urban and Regional Research 34 (1): 146-62.

Week 5 Infrastructure: housing, water, electricity and urban environmental justice
Murray and Myers: chapters 12 and 13
Posel, Deborah 2006. “Marriage at the Drop of a Hat: Housing and Partnership in South Africa’s Urban African Townships, 1920s-1960s,”History Workshop Journal 61: 57-75.

Week 6 Segregation: Historical and Contemporary Issues
Freund: chapter 4
Schensul, Daniel, 2008. “From Resources to Power: The State and Spatial Change in Post-apartheid Durban, South Africa.” Studies in Comparative International Development, 43: 290-313.

Week 7 Migration
Murray and Myers: chapter 2
Southern African Migration Project, Selected Papers (http://www.queensu.ca/samp/)

Week 8 Popular culture
Murray and Myers: chapters 3 and 4
David Coplan ch.1 In Township Tonight

Week 9 Urban aesthetics
Readings TBA
Colonial notions of beauty and modernity
Murambatsvina (Operation Clean Up Trash)
Shopping malls spring up across Africa as middle class grows

Week 10 Economic development: livelihoods and informality
Murray and Myers: chapters 5, 6 and 9

Week 11 Food insecurity and new health issues
African Food Security Urban Network, Selected Papers (http://www.afsun.org/)
Goebel, Allison, Belinda Dodson and Trevor Hill. “Urban Advantage or Urban Penalty? A Case Study of Female-Headed Households in a South African City” Health & Place 16 (3) May: 573–580.
Mkwambisi, David D. Fraser, Evan D.G.; Dougill, Andy J. 2011. “Urban agriculture and poverty reduction: Evaluating how food production in cities contributes to food security, employment and income in Malawi,” Journal of International Development, v 23, n 2, p 181-203.

Week 12 African Cities, Globalization and Protest
Freund: chapter 6
Alexander, Peter, 2010. “Rebellion of the poor: South Africa’s service delivery protests—a preliminary analysis.” Review of African Political Economy, 37(123): 25-40.

Week 13 Summing up
Lernziele Students understand the challenge of urbanisation in Africa with a specific focus on gender, health and environment.
Literatur Freund, Bill 2007. The African City. A History. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
Murray, Martin J and Garth A. Myers (eds) 2007. Cities in Contemporary Africa. New York: Palgrave/MacMillan.
Selected web materials and journal articles will be made available via www.isis.unibas.ch.
Bemerkungen The course is taught by Prof. Marc Epprecht and Alisson Goebel, Queen's University Canada. The two experts on gender and environment in Southern Africa are visiting scholars at the Centre for African Studies Basel in Spring Semester 2013.
Participants must register on www.isis.unibas.ch.

 

Teilnahmebedingungen Adequate english language skills
The course is geared to MA students, BA students in their final year may join depending on available space.
Anmeldung zur Lehrveranstaltung Please register via isis.unibas.ch where you will have access to the readings.
Unterrichtssprache Englisch
Einsatz digitaler Medien kein spezifischer Einsatz

 

Intervall Wochentag Zeit Raum

Keine Einzeltermine verfügbar, bitte informieren Sie sich direkt bei den Dozierenden.

Module Modul Ausserwestliches Christentum und Austauschprozesse (ÖM 1) (Bachelor Theologie)
Modul Ausserwestliches Christentum und Austauschprozesse (ÖM 1) (Bachelor Studienfach: Theologie)
Modul Culture and Society (Master Studiengang: African Studies)
Modul Environment and Human Well-Being (Master Studiengang: African Studies)
Modul Lebensverhältnisse, Umwelt und Ökonomie (Master Studienfach: Geschlechterforschung)
Modul Reflexion interkultureller Gegenwartsfragen in der Theologie (ÖM 2) (Master Theologie)
Modul Reflexion interkultureller Gegenwartsfragen in der Theologie (ÖM 2) (Master Studienfach: Theologie)
Modul Regionalthemen der Ethnologie (Master Studienfach: Ethnologie)
Modul Subjekt, Körper und Identität (Master Studienfach: Geschlechterforschung)
Modul Themenfelder der Geschlechterforschung (Bachelor Studienfach: Geschlechterforschung)
Modul Wirtschaft, Kultur und Wissen (Master Studienfach: Soziologie)
Modul Wirtschaft, Politik und Entwicklung (Master Studienfach: Soziologie)
Vertiefungsmodul (Transfakultäre Querschnittsprogramme im freien Kreditpunkte-Bereich)
Leistungsüberprüfung Lehrveranst.-begleitend
Hinweise zur Leistungsüberprüfung Participants are expected to make active contributions to the learning process through various activities every week.
An-/Abmeldung zur Leistungsüberprüfung Anmelden: Belegen; Abmelden: nicht erforderlich
Wiederholungsprüfung keine Wiederholungsprüfung
Skala Pass / Fail
Wiederholtes Belegen nicht wiederholbar
Zuständige Fakultät Philosophisch-Historische Fakultät, studadmin-philhist@unibas.ch
Anbietende Organisationseinheit Kompetenzzentrum Afrika

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