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To Whom Does the City Belong? Obstacles to Right to the City for the Urban Poor in Bangladesh
Journal article   Peer reviewed

To Whom Does the City Belong? Obstacles to Right to the City for the Urban Poor in Bangladesh

Lutfun Nahar Lata
Journal of contemporary Asia, Vol.51(4), pp.638-659
2021

Abstract

governance public space right to the city street vending urban poor
Due to a lack of available job opportunities in the formal sector and financial resources, in most parts of the developing world the urban poor rely on access to urban public space for earning their livelihoods. The existing literature shows that the urban poor are often evicted without relocation from public spaces by city governments in promoting a "global city" image. Within this context, this article explores how city authorities deny a right to the city for the urban poor. In Dhaka, Bangladesh, this occurs through a comprehensive and orchestrated programme to deny the poor their rights as citizens of the city, to exploit and extort them, to manipulate the political system and to stigmatise them. Focussing on poor people's involvement in informal street vending in a case study of a slum in Dhaka, this article argues that Bangladesh's particular form of oppressive political culture, particularly its authoritarian party system, does not provide poor citizens with even the voice required to negotiate a right to the city. The article identifies particular forms of everyday governance that lead to a complete stripping of effective political power.

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UN Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs)

This output has contributed to the advancement of the following goals:

#11 Sustainable Cities and Communities

Source: InCites

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Citation topics
6 Social Sciences
6.86 Human Geography
6.86.149 Urban Politics
Web Of Science research areas
Area Studies
ESI research areas
Social Sciences, general
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