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The production of uneven access to land and water in peri-urban spaces:<i>de facto</i>privatisation in greater Accra
47
Citations
55
References
2018
Year
Water PolicyUrban DevelopmentGreater AccraEnvironmental PlanningSocial SciencesEnvironmental PolicyUrban Land UseUrban GovernancePeri-urban SpacesUrban Water ManagementUneven AccessLand-use PlanningUrban StudiesWater GovernancePublic PolicyGeographyUrban PlanningUrban GeographyWater PrivatisationUrban EconomicsPrivatisation ContributesUrban Space
Peri-urban spaces are frontiers of privatisation where inequalities in access to land and water evolve. In this article, we analyse a particular mode of land and water privatisation in peri-urban spaces of the Greater Accra Metropolitan Area (GAMA), Ghana. We illustrate that in the domain of land, traditional authorities tend to act as private owners rather than custodians of customary land, while in the domain of water, multiple private water providers have emerged next to the official water utility. A combined reading and analysis of these processes as forms of de facto privatisation contributes to understanding the similarities in the control over and access to land and water in peri-urban spaces. We show that in the de facto privatised control context of the peri-urban GAMA, access gained to land and water has to be actively maintained. Both gaining and maintaining access exhibit socio-economic inequalities and this is particularly so in the case of maintaining access. The article is a call for a better connection between land and water studies in order to deepen understanding of the processes at play in peri-urban spaces.
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