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Gendered il/legalities of housing formalisation in India and South Africa.

Authors :
Buthelezi, Sibongile
Rajasekhar, Santhi
Cuomo, Dana
Brickell, Katherine
Meth, Paula
Source :
Environment & Planning A; Aug2019, Vol. 51 Issue 5, p1068-1088, 21p
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

Urban interventions, such as state-led housing provision in India and South Africa, establish new legal landscapes for urban residents (formerly slum/informal dwellers), who become home owners, legal occupiers of spaces, ratespayers and visible citizens although not in ways that are necessarily contingent. These material-legal processes are also acutely gendered underscoring wider calls for a feminist approach to legal geographies. Informed by a comparative empirically driven study, this paper explores how in both contexts, urban interventions work to enhance gender equality through improving women's material shelter in the city, and introduce tenure security, often prioritising very poor women. Yet, their implementation is riddled with slippages as well as operating within a broader poverty–patriarchy nexus. This means that these legally framed benefits have occurred alongside complex and perverse outcomes including unemployment, gendered tensions and acute loss of privacy for some. Housing interventions produce uneven legal geographies, with persisting gendered inequalities and poverty distorting residents' abilities to benefit from material-legal interventions aimed at improving their lives. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
0308518X
Volume :
51
Issue :
5
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
Environment & Planning A
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
137396363
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1177/0308518X18792898