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Welcome to Greater Edendale

Histories of Environment, Health, and Gender in an African City

Marc Epprecht author

Format:Hardback

Publisher:McGill-Queen's University Press

Published:28th Sep '16

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Welcome to Greater Edendale cover

In the coming decades, the bulk of Africa's anticipated urban population growth will take place in smaller cities. Failure to manage environmental and public health problems in one such aspiring city, Edendale, has fostered severe pollution, seemingly intractable poverty, and gender inequalities that directly fuel one of the worst HIV/AIDS pandemics in the world. A nuanced and timely presentation of South African responses to changing times, conditions, opportunities, and state interventions, Welcome to Greater Edendale reconstructs nearly two centuries of contestation over land, governance, human rights, identity, housing, sanitation, public health, and the meaning of development. Bringing gender and health issues to the foreground, Marc Epprecht reveals many unexpected or forgotten triumphs against environmental injustice, but also unsettling continuities between colonial, apartheid, and post-apartheid policies to spur economic growth. Sheltered from the glare of national media and often overlooked by scholars, smaller cities like Edendale attract political patronage, corruption, and violent protests, while rapid climate change promises to further strain their infrastructure, social services, and public health. A challenging, innovative, and thoughtful examination of the history and politics of South Africa, Welcome to Greater Edendale questions the common assumptions embedded in environmental policy, gender relations, democracy, and the neoliberal model of development in which so many African cities are ensnared.

" Evocatively written, Welcome to Greater Edendale speaks to and resolutely engages with debates in South African and international historiography on social medicine, public health, the environment, gender, segregation, race, and local politics." Stephen Rockel, University of Toronto

ISBN: 9780773547735

Dimensions: unknown

Weight: unknown

360 pages