4.4 Article

Dispossession as depotentiation

Journal

ENVIRONMENT AND PLANNING D-SOCIETY & SPACE
Volume 39, Issue 6, Pages 976-993

Publisher

SAGE PUBLICATIONS LTD
DOI: 10.1177/02637758211036467

Keywords

Dispossession; Johannesburg; potentiality; gender-based violence; eviction; unlawful occupation

Funding

  1. Department of Anthropology, Wits University
  2. Volkswagen Foundation
  3. Institute of Social and Cultural Anthropology at the Freie Universitat, Berlin
  4. Wellcome Foundation

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This paper proposes a theory of urban dispossession as depotentiation, aiming to complement and critique Harvey's concept of accumulation by dispossession, and to contribute to the conceptual developments on eviction. Drawing on ethnographic fieldwork in inner-city Johannesburg, it reveals the precarious living conditions of thousands of residents in a state of extreme instability and marginalization.
This paper proposes a theory of urban dispossession as depotentiation. 'Depotentiation', as I employ the term, indicates the diminishment of imminent capacities, affects and potentialities. I propose this formulation to both complement and critique Harvey's dominant notion of accumulation by dispossession as the commodification of the urban commons and to contribute to conceptual developments on the stratified and affective dimensions of eviction. The evictions in my study operate in liminal urban spaces where there are no 'commons', but rather incomplete and fragile processes of 'commoning' and high levels of mobility and precarity. This paper draws on ethnographic fieldwork conducted between 2011 and 2019 in inner-city Johannesburg in unlawful and other informal occupations, frequently termed 'bad buildings', 'hijacked buildings' or 'dark buildings' and other low-income accommodation. These are sites of extreme precarity and liminality, endurance and potentiality, where tens of thousands of inner-city residents, South African and foreign-national, live without essential services and subject to the constant threat of eviction or deportation. Dispossession of their residents operates not only through the commodification of an urban commons but also through the diminishment of urban potentiality.

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