Authors
Manja Hoppe Andreasen, Gordon McGranahan, Alphonce Kyessi, Wilbard Kombe
Publication date
2020/4
Journal
Environment and Urbanization
Volume
32
Issue
1
Pages
89-108
Publisher
SAGE Publications
Description
Between half and three-quarters of new housing development in African cities has been taking place on land acquired through informal channels. This paper offers insights from a study of self-builders’ investments in informal land and housing in Dar es Salaam and Mwanza, two of the largest and fastest-growing cities in Tanzania. The findings demonstrate that self-builders’ investments in informal land and self-built housing are inextricably linked with household wealth accumulation processes and long-term security. In light of the research findings, the paper offers reflections on the potential impacts of ongoing land formalization processes. The paper argues that the informal housing system has far more advantages than appreciated by proponents of formalization, that the vision of bringing “dead capital” to life is misleading, and that the anticipated emergence of active formal markets for land and housing may not …
Total citations
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