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Accepted Paper:
Dakar’s flood drainage canals: assembling urban subjectivities, transforming political spaces
Alejandro Barcena
(King's College London)
Paper short abstract:
This paper explores the process by which coalitions emerge, subjectivities become politicized and transformative adaptation scales up. For this, the paper deploys a Deleuzian framework that highlights the relationship between authority, knowledge, immanent capacities and contradictory events.
Paper long abstract:
In the context of rapid environmental change, research on adaptation politics highlights the role of power in socio-ecological change, offering insights on how authority, knowledge and subjectivity shape adaptation pathways. Less attention has been given to how authority emerges, subjectivities become politicized and transformative adaptation scales up. This paper addresses these limitations, drawing on a Deleuzian reading of subjectivity, prioritizing analytically immanent capacities and contradictory events. This framework is applied to the case of Pikine, an informal Dakar settlement, where intensifying floods in the 1990s were managed through drainage canal construction, authorized by the president. The paper links this decision to historical legacies and unexpected events, including floods, structural adjustments, the emergence of a coalition of youth organizations, and changing government authority. It invites policy to foster the self-organization capacity of emerging coalitions of vulnerable groups and to leverage the openings offered by moments of crisis.
Panel
P57
Reimagining urban futures: Addressing urban informalities, conflicts, exclusion, and displacement through reform coalitions in the south