Working Paper

Living Off-Grid Food and Infrastructure Collaboration Working Paper 1

Living Off-Grid Food and Infrastructure Collaboration: Concepts and Assumptions

Published on 1 May 2023

This working paper is the product of the Living Off-Grid Food and Infrastructure Collaboration. It is designed to bring together our thinking on how infrastructure can shape the food and nutritional security of urban marginalised populations. Infrastructure assemblages include the material (physical and technological), as well as the political and systemic factors that ‘govern’ how infrastructure is developed and used.

Urban food systems are made up of public and private actors, and market and governance processes that shape the cost and availability of food in different urban contexts. At the intersection of urban food systems and infrastructure assemblages lies the food and nutrition security of urban dwellers.

The framing of contemporary debates and policy priorities with respect to both nutrition and infrastructure are heavily conditioned by presumptions – in favour of formality and griddedness, for example, or of the need to raise agricultural productivity – which fail to reflect the reality of marginalised communities in Southern cities. For these communities, their experience is one of hybridity, with formal and informal infrastructures and economies central to their lives and livelihoods.

These hybrid arrangements are imbued with power structures and socio-political dynamics that are context specific and further condition communities’ experiences. Together, these are the factors that condition or shape the possibilities for individuals and households pursuing different food strategies. However, there is a failure to reflect this reality in the conceptualisation of infrastructure challenges, leading to unworkable solutions and policies that end up perpetuating problems.

There is an urgent need to reframe problematic assumptions, starting first and foremost from the entry point of urban informal settlements in the global South. By taking food as a lens in this process, we illuminate these contexts, and how they relate to hybrid infrastructure arrangements and potential alternatives. This reformulation is vital at this critical juncture, when Southern cities need infrastructure development that meets the needs of rapidly changing demographics without locking cities and nations into unsustainable pathways.

Cite this publication

Battersby, J.; Brown-Luthango, M.; Fuseini, I.; Gulabani, H.; Haysom, G.; Jackson, B.; Khandelwal, V.; MacGregor, H.; Mitra, S.; Nisbett, N.; Perera, I.; Te Lintelo, D.; Thorpe, J. and Toriro P. (2023) Living Off-Grid Food and Infrastructure Collaboration Working Paper 1: Concepts and Assumptions, Brighton: Institute of Development Studies, DOI: 10.19088/LOGIC.2023.001

Authors

Jane Battersby

Senior Lecturer, University of Cape Town

Issahaka Fuseini

University of Ghana

Gareth Haysom

African Centre for Cities, University of Cape Town, South Africa

Ben Jackson

Senior Project Support Officer

Hayley MacGregor

Research Fellow

Nicholas Nisbett

Research Fellow

Iromi Perera

Director, Colombo Urban Lab

Dolf J.H. te Lintelo

Research Fellow and Cities Cluster Leader

Jodie Thorpe

Research Fellow

Publication details

published by
Institute of Development Studies
doi
10.19088/LOGIC.2023.001
language
English

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