Urbanisation by subtraction: the afterlife of camps in northern Uganda

Urbanisation by subtraction: the afterlife of camps in northern Uganda

Author: 
Whyte, Susan Reynolds
Publisher: 
Cambridge University Press
Date published: 
2014
Record type: 
Responsibility: 
Babiiha, Sulayman, jt. author
Mukyala, Rebecca, jt. author
Meinert, Lotte, jt. author
Journal Title: 
Journal of Modern African Studies
Source: 
Journal of Modern African Studies, Vol. 52, No.4, December 2014, pp. 597-622
Abstract: 

As peace returns to northern Uganda, a unique arithmetic of development is evident in the former Internally Displaced Persons camps. Small trading centres whose populations multiplied as they became camps now envision futures as Town Boards. Subtraction is necessary: the displaced people and the dead buried in the camps are being returned to their rural villages. Urban planners have produced meticulous drawings that envisage the division of land into plots for development. Donors are making additions in the form of new market buildings and water supplies. Yet this arithmetic must reckon with new problems as time passes. The article is based primarily on fieldwork in Awach, a former IDP camp now slated for status as a Town Board. In analysing material from interviews with landowners, ‘remainders’ who stayed behind after the camp closed, local leaders and officials, we emphasise the paradoxes, tensions and conflicts of this special path to development.

Language: 
Country focus: 

CITATION: Whyte, Susan Reynolds. Urbanisation by subtraction: the afterlife of camps in northern Uganda . : Cambridge University Press , 2014. Journal of Modern African Studies, Vol. 52, No.4, December 2014, pp. 597-622 - Available at: https://library.au.int/urbanisation-subtraction-afterlife-camps-northern-uganda-5