2021
DOI: 10.1080/13604813.2021.1885903
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Under the wire

Abstract: This paper discusses the occupation of an electricity transmission line right-of-way (ROW) at a busy interchange to the western edge of Accra, Ghana. In planning documents, ROWs are depicted as open spaces and obtaining permits to develop the land is prohibited. However, across the city, people continue to live and work under the wire, describing their occupancy as one of ongoing temporariness. Drawing from fourteen months of ethnographic research in Accra, I unpack the production of this urban temporality and… Show more

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Cited by 5 publications
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“…The research was multi-sited and involved engaging with various facets of the sand economy and the residents who lived and worked in a small portion of Awoshie Junction in western Accra. I spent many months visiting this community, learning from residents who shared experiences of their precarious occupation of government land, which sat under an electricity transmission wire (Dawson 2021b). On the opposite side of the multi-lane road was a busy sand station, hosting trucks and piles of sand.…”
Section: Situating Sand In Accramentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The research was multi-sited and involved engaging with various facets of the sand economy and the residents who lived and worked in a small portion of Awoshie Junction in western Accra. I spent many months visiting this community, learning from residents who shared experiences of their precarious occupation of government land, which sat under an electricity transmission wire (Dawson 2021b). On the opposite side of the multi-lane road was a busy sand station, hosting trucks and piles of sand.…”
Section: Situating Sand In Accramentioning
confidence: 99%