Cape Town after Apartheid: Crime and Governance in the Divided City Buy on Amazon
Facebook LinkedIn

Cape Town after Apartheid: Crime and Governance in the Divided City

67.50 75.00 -10% USD

Usually ships in 24 hours

Book Details
Author(s) Tony Roshan Samara
ISBN / ASIN 0816670005
ISBN-13 9780816670000
Availability Usually ships in 24 hours
Sales Rank #7,988,081
Category Social Science
Marketplace United States 🇺🇸
Ratings & Reviews No reviews yet — be the first!

No reviews yet.

Description
Nearly two decades after the dismantling of apartheid in South Africa, how different does the nation look? In Cape Town, is hardening inequality under conditions of neoliberal globalization actually reproducing the repressive governance of the apartheid era? By exploring issues of urban security and development, Tony Roshan Samara brings to light the features of urban apartheid that increasingly mark not only Cape Town but also the global cities of our day—cities as diverse as Los Angeles, Rio de Janeiro, Paris, and Beijing.

Cape Town after Apartheid focuses on urban renewal and urban security policies and practices in the city center and townships as this aspiring world-class city actively pursues a neoliberal approach to development. The city’s attempt to escape its past is, however, constrained by crippling inequalities, racial and ethnic tensions, political turmoil, and persistent insecurity. Samara shows how governance in Cape Town remains rooted in the perceived need to control dangerous populations and protect a somewhat fragile and unpopular economic system. In urban areas around the world, where the affluent minority and poor majority live in relative proximity to each other, aggressive security practices and strict governance reflect and reproduce the divided city.

A critical case for understanding a transnational view of urban governance, especially in highly unequal, majority-poor cities, this closely observed study of postapartheid Cape Town affords valuable insight into how security and governance technologies from the global North combine with local forms to create new approaches to social control in cities across the global South.
Donate to EbookNetworking
Previous Book Simulation and Social Theor... Next Book The Decline of Men: How the...
Previous Simulation and So...
Next The Decline of Me...