Urban Planning (Dec 2023)

The Indifference of Transport: Comparative Research of “Infrastructural Ruins” in the Gauteng City-Region and Greater Maputo

  • Margot Rubin,
  • Lindsay Blair Howe,
  • Sarah Charlton,
  • Muhammed Suleman,
  • Anselmo Cani,
  • Lesego Tshuwa,
  • Alexandra Parker

DOI
https://doi.org/10.17645/up.v8i4.7264
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 8, no. 4
pp. 351 – 365

Abstract

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States in the Global South have consistently invested in large-scale, vanity infrastructure projects, which are often not used by the majority of their residents. Using a mixed-method and comparative approach with findings from Greater Maputo, Mozambique, and the Gauteng City-Region exposes how internationally-supported and expensive transport projects do not meet the needs of lower-income urban residents, and meanwhile, widespread, everyday modes of commuting such as trains, paratransit, and pathways for walking deteriorate. State-led development thus often generates an infrastructural landscape characterised by “ruin” and “indifference.” These choices are anachronistic, steeped in a desire for a modernist-inspired future and in establishing narratives of control. In the cases of Gauteng and Maputo, whether or not the infrastructure is “successfully” implemented, these choices have resulted in a distancing of the state from the majority of urban residents.

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