6 research outputs found

    Right to adequate housing following forced evictions in post-conflict Colombo, Sri Lanka

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    Abstract onlyResearchers examine the consequences of a holistic understanding of ā€œadequate housing,ā€ by including the social and cultural impacts of housing. They contribute to a book that offers a close look at forced evictions, drawing on empirical studies and conceptual frameworks from both the Global North and South

    Power, politics and policy in the appropriation of urban wetlands: the critical case of Sri Lanka

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    Little is known about the drivers and governance strategies of appropriation of urban nature in the global south. We compare urban land-grabbing in the city of Colombo, Sri Lanka, with broader understanding of rural land-grabbing in the developing world. We show that the colonial legacy of appropriation and alteration of urban wetlands in Colombo has attained new heights in the neo-liberal period. This cyclical process has caused acute irreversible damage to the wetland ecosystem and a vast majority of the urban poor, with the marginalised continuing to suffer dispossession and environmental hazard. In recognition of the inherent limitations of 'uncontrollable' hybrid ecologies, potent social struggles have emerged to resist the continued appropriation agenda. As this cycle is perpetuated, broader social struggles for democratic urban governance have overtaken the pursuit of narrow political-economic goals and internal policy reform
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