Urban Frontiers and Rural Transformation: Formation of Emerging Urban Centres and Ambiguous Governance in Tanzania

Publikation: KonferencebidragKonferenceabstrakt til konferenceForskning

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Urban Frontiers and Rural Transformation : Formation of Emerging Urban Centres and Ambiguous Governance in Tanzania. / Lazaro, Evelyne; Agergaard, Jytte; Birch-Thomsen, Torben; Larsen, Marianne Nylandsted.

2015. Abstract fra Property and Citizenship in Developing Societies , Copenhagen, Danmark.

Publikation: KonferencebidragKonferenceabstrakt til konferenceForskning

Harvard

Lazaro, E, Agergaard, J, Birch-Thomsen, T & Larsen, MN 2015, 'Urban Frontiers and Rural Transformation: Formation of Emerging Urban Centres and Ambiguous Governance in Tanzania', Property and Citizenship in Developing Societies , Copenhagen, Danmark, 23/06/2015 - 26/06/2015.

APA

Lazaro, E., Agergaard, J., Birch-Thomsen, T., & Larsen, M. N. (2015). Urban Frontiers and Rural Transformation: Formation of Emerging Urban Centres and Ambiguous Governance in Tanzania. Abstract fra Property and Citizenship in Developing Societies , Copenhagen, Danmark.

Vancouver

Lazaro E, Agergaard J, Birch-Thomsen T, Larsen MN. Urban Frontiers and Rural Transformation: Formation of Emerging Urban Centres and Ambiguous Governance in Tanzania. 2015. Abstract fra Property and Citizenship in Developing Societies , Copenhagen, Danmark.

Author

Lazaro, Evelyne ; Agergaard, Jytte ; Birch-Thomsen, Torben ; Larsen, Marianne Nylandsted. / Urban Frontiers and Rural Transformation : Formation of Emerging Urban Centres and Ambiguous Governance in Tanzania. Abstract fra Property and Citizenship in Developing Societies , Copenhagen, Danmark.13 s.

Bibtex

@conference{e830107653044d81b579086d43e04df7,
title = "Urban Frontiers and Rural Transformation: Formation of Emerging Urban Centres and Ambiguous Governance in Tanzania",
abstract = "In Tanzania, urban frontier development is characterized by the emergence of urban centers spatially located in what is usually perceived as rural areas. The Tanzanian government has responded with the creation of a new category of {\textquoteleft}small towns{\textquoteright}, which includes almost one hundred such centres, but there is no specific policy for them. In this paper we explore how social and spatial transformations in dynamic rural regions are driving this transformation from rural to urban places and discusses how this rapid process is necessitating new and transferable structures of governance. The analysis is based on field data collected in four emerging urban centres (EUCs) in Tanzania (2011-14) all characterized by particular drop related agricultural economic dynamics that stimulates early transformation, but decrease in importance as urbanization takes over. In the paper we investigate this transition and detect how the EUCs become important places of attraction, not only to people in the immediate rural hinterland, but also from distant regions of Tanzania. Also, we explore the governance challenges that local administrators, community groups, business owners are envisaging and discuss the importance of stimulating and supporting EUC development, not only in their own right but also as an important policy action to stimulate poverty reduction.",
keywords = "Faculty of Science, Urban Frontiers, Rural transformation, Governance, Tanzania",
author = "Evelyne Lazaro and Jytte Agergaard and Torben Birch-Thomsen and Larsen, {Marianne Nylandsted}",
year = "2015",
month = jun,
language = "English",
note = "Property and Citizenship in Developing Societies : 3rd International Conference, Urban Property, Governance and Citizenship in the Global South., (PROCIT) ; Conference date: 23-06-2015 Through 26-06-2015",

}

RIS

TY - ABST

T1 - Urban Frontiers and Rural Transformation

T2 - Property and Citizenship in Developing Societies

AU - Lazaro, Evelyne

AU - Agergaard, Jytte

AU - Birch-Thomsen, Torben

AU - Larsen, Marianne Nylandsted

PY - 2015/6

Y1 - 2015/6

N2 - In Tanzania, urban frontier development is characterized by the emergence of urban centers spatially located in what is usually perceived as rural areas. The Tanzanian government has responded with the creation of a new category of ‘small towns’, which includes almost one hundred such centres, but there is no specific policy for them. In this paper we explore how social and spatial transformations in dynamic rural regions are driving this transformation from rural to urban places and discusses how this rapid process is necessitating new and transferable structures of governance. The analysis is based on field data collected in four emerging urban centres (EUCs) in Tanzania (2011-14) all characterized by particular drop related agricultural economic dynamics that stimulates early transformation, but decrease in importance as urbanization takes over. In the paper we investigate this transition and detect how the EUCs become important places of attraction, not only to people in the immediate rural hinterland, but also from distant regions of Tanzania. Also, we explore the governance challenges that local administrators, community groups, business owners are envisaging and discuss the importance of stimulating and supporting EUC development, not only in their own right but also as an important policy action to stimulate poverty reduction.

AB - In Tanzania, urban frontier development is characterized by the emergence of urban centers spatially located in what is usually perceived as rural areas. The Tanzanian government has responded with the creation of a new category of ‘small towns’, which includes almost one hundred such centres, but there is no specific policy for them. In this paper we explore how social and spatial transformations in dynamic rural regions are driving this transformation from rural to urban places and discusses how this rapid process is necessitating new and transferable structures of governance. The analysis is based on field data collected in four emerging urban centres (EUCs) in Tanzania (2011-14) all characterized by particular drop related agricultural economic dynamics that stimulates early transformation, but decrease in importance as urbanization takes over. In the paper we investigate this transition and detect how the EUCs become important places of attraction, not only to people in the immediate rural hinterland, but also from distant regions of Tanzania. Also, we explore the governance challenges that local administrators, community groups, business owners are envisaging and discuss the importance of stimulating and supporting EUC development, not only in their own right but also as an important policy action to stimulate poverty reduction.

KW - Faculty of Science

KW - Urban Frontiers

KW - Rural transformation

KW - Governance

KW - Tanzania

M3 - Conference abstract for conference

Y2 - 23 June 2015 through 26 June 2015

ER -

ID: 338060355