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Accepted Paper:

Economic resilience in fragile cities  
Alison Brown (Cardiff University) Peter Mackie (Cardiff University)

Paper short abstract:

This paper examines the informal economy's role in poverty-reduction and economic recovery in post-conflict and fragile cities. Based on studies of Hargeisa and Karachi, the paper argues for a re-evaluation of the informal economy in supporting post-conflict resilience and recovery.

Paper long abstract:

This paper examines livelihoods and survival strategies in post-conflict cities and the role of the urban informal economy in poverty-reduction and economic recovery. The focus is both on displaced people moving into the city, including former combatants, migrants and refugees, and on host communities. Based on a comparison of findings in Hargeia, Somaliland, destroyed by civil war in 1988, and Karachi, widely affected by violent crime, the paper draws on current DFID-ESRC research on Economic Recovery in Post-Conflict Cities: the Role of the Urban Informal Economy, to examine the how the informal economy responds through conflict and its role in supporting economic recovery in fragile cities.

Political upheaval or violent conflict is often characterised by a fundamental failure of governance and economic collapse. An immediate impact of crisis is the destruction of livelihoods and local economies, leading to insecurity, poverty, hunger, and frustration. Problems are often compounded an influx of urban migrants, who may find integration into urban life difficult. Using a pathways framework, the paper will examine structural inequalities of politics, governance, ethnicity, religion, and gender, and individual strategies e.g drawing on kinship or trade networks, or gang monopolies, and the anonymity afforded by working in the city, to examine different livelihood trajectories. The paper argues that both government initiatives and humanitarian assistance miss the potential of what people are already doing to help themselves.

Panel P11
Supporting change in fragile states: experiences and next steps
  Session 1