Elite resistance and the disabling of spatial transformation in johannesburg

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dc.contributor.author Bradlow, B.
dc.date.accessioned 2021-11-02T09:24:34Z
dc.date.available 2021-11-02T09:24:34Z
dc.date.issued 2021
dc.description Papers presented virtually at the 39th International Southern African Transport Conference on 05 -07 July 2021
dc.description.abstract Transitions to democracy promise equal political power. But political ruptures carry no guarantee that democracy can overcome the accumulated inequalities of history. In South Africa, the transition to democracy shifted power from a racial minority in ways that suggested an unusually high probability of material change. This article analyzes the limits of public power after democratic transitions. Why has the post-Apartheid local state in Johannesburg been unable to achieve a spatially inclusive distribution of public goods despite a political imperative for both spatial and fiscal redistribution? I rely on interviews and archival research, conducted in Johannesburg between 2015 and 2018. Because the color line created a sharp distinction between political and economic power, traditional white urban elites required non-majoritarian and hidden strategies that translated their structural power into effective power. The cumulative effect of these “weapons of the strong” has been to disable the capacity of the local state to countervail the power of wealthy residents’ associations and property developers. Through these strategies, elites repurposed institutional reforms for redistribution to instead reproduce the city’s inequalities.
dc.format.extent 1 page
dc.format.medium PDF
dc.identifier.uri http://hdl.handle.net/2263/82364
dc.language.iso en
dc.publisher Southern African Transport Conference 2021
dc.rights Southern African Transport Conference 2021
dc.title Elite resistance and the disabling of spatial transformation in johannesburg
dc.type Article


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