The politics and pathology of place: student protests, collective consumption and the right to the city in East London

Show simple item record

dc.date.accessioned 2018-11-21 en
dc.date.accessioned 2022-08-17T13:59:28Z
dc.date.available 2022-08-17T13:59:28Z
dc.date.issued 2018-11-21 en
dc.identifier.uri http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11910/12902
dc.description.abstract This chapter considers the student protests in East London in the context of their struggle for a right to the city. It reflects on the conditions under which students have been incorporated into the city and the accommodation crisis that has been brewing in the two inner-city suburbs, Quigney and Southernwood, where students have taken up residence in large numbers over the past decade. The chapter considers these protests as a struggle over collective consumption that has emerged in a context of inner-city degeneration, which neither the universities nor the state has been prepared, or able, to address. By taking to the streets to protest rather than staying at their campus sites, students from a number of campuses were able to present themselves as a unified front, based on their shared experiences and asserted expectations of a form of urban citizenship that the city and the universities refused to acknowledge. Their protests targeted what they perceived as a crisis of social reproduction of student life and, by extension, their capacity to achieve the qualifications they needed for future upward social mobility and economic opportunity. In reflecting on these issues, the chapter presents findings from a set of student surveys undertaken by the Fort Hare Institute of Social and Economic Research shortly after the October 2015 protests. en
dc.format.medium Print en
dc.publisher African Minds en
dc.subject EAST LONDON en
dc.subject UNIVERSITIES en
dc.subject PROTEST en
dc.subject POLITICS en
dc.title The politics and pathology of place: student protests, collective consumption and the right to the city in East London en
dc.type Chapter in Monograph en
dc.description.version Y en
dc.ProjectNumber N/A en
dc.BudgetYear 2018/19 en
dc.ResearchGroup Economic Perfomance and Development en
dc.SourceTitle Anchored in place: rethinking higher education and development in South Africa en
dc.SourceTitle.Editor Bank, L. en
dc.SourceTitle.Editor Cloete, N. en
dc.SourceTitle.Editor van Schalkwyk, F. en
dc.PlaceOfPublication Cape Town en
dc.ArchiveNumber 10620 en
dc.PageNumber 207-230 en
dc.outputnumber 9615 en
dc.bibliographictitle Bank, L. & Paterson, M. (2018) The politics and pathology of place: student protests, collective consumption and the right to the city in East London. In: Bank, L., Cloete, N. & van Schalkwyk, F. (eds).Anchored in place: rethinking higher education and development in South Africa. Cape Town: African Minds. 207-230. http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11910/12902 en
dc.publicationyear 2018 en
dc.contributor.author1 Bank, L. en
dc.contributor.author2 Paterson, M. en


Files in this item

Files Size Format View

There are no files associated with this item.

This item appears in the following Collection(s)

Show simple item record