Urban ARC 2024 | Unpacking Marginalities
IIHS Annual Research Conference | 11–13 January 2024
Urban ARC 2024 | Unpacking Marginalities
IIHS Annual Research Conference | 11–13 January 2024
The eighth edition of Urban ARC, IIHS’ Annual Research Conference, will take place between 11-13 January 2024, virtually and in person, at the IIHS Bengaluru City Campus. The theme for this edition is ‘Unpacking Marginalities’.
An intricate landscape of urban space houses the complex and multifaceted phenomenon of marginalities – an experience that affects the lives of people who reside in diverse forms of margins, and the experiences of multiple marginalities within urban spaces, in both, the Global South, where rapid urbanisation and informality are pervasive, and the Global North, where social polarisation and spatial fragmentation are burgeoning. The current context of climate change, pandemic, conflicts, migration, demographic shifts, financial meltdowns, and technological developments, poses novel and unprecedented challenges as well as opportunities for people living in urban margins and raises ever-evolving questions for different systems that aim to address them.
Looking at Marginalities and Agencies
Rapid urbanisation and its many discontents have rarely been linear or uniform in their trajectories. Further, the experiences of marginalisation have elicited disparate responses. Moving beyond the canonical core-periphery frameworks, new knowledge has emphasised the need for grounded and contextual understandings. The Urban holds marginalities as experiences and defined spatialities, isolating or segregating people based on factors such as caste, class, religion, ethnicity, race, gender, disability, or sexual orientation. The experiences of marginality are multi-faceted. Being unable to find housing in the city; having restricted access to health and educational opportunities due to one’s social or religious identity; not receiving basic living amenities (water, sanitation, electricity) due to area of habitation or migrant status; being denied access to technological innovations (digital devices, internet services, or online platforms) due to lack of education and affordability; lack of access to natural resources or increased exposure to environmental risks due to degradation of natural ecosystems by powerful private or state interest groups are lived experiences in the urban margins. These marginalities manifest themselves along the lines of livelihoods, education, and health among others.
While urban marginality involves multiple dimensions of disadvantage and exclusion, such as social, spatial, structural, environmental/ecological, economic, technological, political, cultural, and historical (Bradatan and Craiutu, 2012), it also involves diverse forms of agency and expression, such as resistance, mobilisation, citizenship, and culture. It is not only a product of the urban core’s power and norms but also a challenge and a contribution to urban studies and knowledge production. While historical marginal positions affect present or future situations, marginalities are also a product of the government’s response to a crisis (Coffey et al., 2020), necessitating the need to recognise and appreciate new forms of agency (Chipaike and Knowledge, 2018; Brosig, 2021). Marginalised groups have cultures, identities, networks, and strategies to navigate and challenge their marginalisation. They also have their own ambitions, claims, and movements to assert their rights and preserve their dignity. The use of facilities like public spaces, art, culture, language, and social media, by marginalised groups, often speaks to specific forms of presence and visibility in the city. Art and culture can be used as forms of resistance against marginalisation and oppression of certain groups by others (Falkovsky, 2021) while certain literary works can also challenge and transform epistemic injustice and other forms of marginalisation (Mihai, 2018). Cities thus become spaces that not only create those marginalities but also spaces that offer them different avenues of expression.
The Global South is home to most of the world’s urban population and is witnessing rapid and dynamic urbanisation (Lawhon et al., 2020). Mainstream urban studies have often disregarded or dismissed Southern research, which explores the urban realities and theories of the Global South, deeming it irrelevant or exceptional (Robinson, 2002; Roy, 2009). By promoting innovative and participatory research methods to engage with urban marginalities and resistances, such as action research, ethnography, storytelling, mapping, and visual approaches, (Banks et al., 2019; Miraftab & Kudva, 2015) Southern research emphasises the epistemic rights and contributions of Southern scholars and practitioners (Sheppard et al., 2013; McFarlane & Robinson, 2012). Academic conversations around marginalities need to acknowledge this epistemic history and the complexity of experiences, and recognise that they are not mutually exclusive and often overlap or intersect with each other in complex ways. Thus, it becomes important to recognise and engage with the diversity and richness of marginalities in theory and practice.
A Call to Explore and Reflect
While a lot has been identified to constitute marginality, it remains an elusive concept. (Cullen and Pretes, 2019) Emphasising the need to understand marginalities and their various manifestations, Urban ARC 2024 presents an opportunity for an exchange of knowledge, considering the need for interdisciplinarity, locally recognised and globally relevant knowledge(s), innovative methods and methods grounded in the principles of epistemic justice. The call emphasises the broad spectrum of this complex urban condition of advantages and disadvantages, experienced by individuals and communities, seeking submissions that explore descriptive and analytical approaches to the concept.
Building on IIHS’ goal of recognising and understanding the ever-changing nature of cities, Urban ARC 2024 aims to explore the concept and practice of urban marginality from various perspectives, methodologies, and disciplines and create a space for dialogue and exchange of knowledge on urban issues, fostering collaboration, discussion and exchange among researchers and practitioners working on this urban issue. The conference invites researchers and practitioners to a space that allows for reflection on their practice(s), against the background of economic, environmental, socio-cultural, technological, political and historical marginalities, using diverse modes of engagement, in ideation, methodology, history, investigation and implementation.
To understand the dynamism of marginalities that urban spaces have grown to house, the conference encourages bringing together an assortment of methods, questions asked, geographies covered, disciplines explored, and outcomes reached. We welcome panel as well as paper submissions covering several sectors (e.g. environment and sustainability, planning and policy, among others), disciplines (e.g. social sciences, climate sciences, humanities, economics, architecture, planning) and methods (quantitative, qualitative, mixed methods), using the lens of research, academia, policy and practice. We invite work that looks at both contemporary and historical ways of studying the urban.
Dates and Procedures
27 November 2023 | Deadline for submitting abstracts |
2nd week of December 2023 | Announcement of selected papers |
11-13 January 2024 | Urban ARC 2024 conference dates |
Please submit your extended abstracts (minimum 1500 words) with the following guidelines –
Abstracts not in the prescribed format will not be considered for inclusion in the conference proceeding.
Contact: For queries regarding the conference, please write to research@iihs.ac.in.
Location: Urban ARC 2024 will be in hybrid format, online on Zoom, and in person at the Indian Institute for Human Settlements’ Bengaluru City Campus (BCC), 2nd Main Road, Sadashivanagar, Bengaluru – 560 080.
Copyright: All copyright for original work will lie with the author. IIHS will use material only with prior permission.
References
Day 1 | 11 January 2024 | ||
9:30 am – 10:00 am | Opening Remarks | Register closed |
10:00 am – 11:15 am | Panel 1 Navigating urban margins: Right(s) to the city | Register closed |
Paper 1 The broken edges: Politics of imagination, expansion, marginalities and the right to Ernakulam city | ||
Paper 2 Tourism, touristification, gentrification and marginalisation: Case study of Fontainhas, Goa | ||
Paper 3 Power spatiality: Discourse on public spaces of Kashmir | ||
Paper 4 Liquid margins: Understanding the shifting nature of marginal geographies through the Buckingham Canal in Chennai | ||
11:15 am – 11:30 am | Break | |
11:30 am – 1:15 pm | Panel 2 Climate, ecology, and resilience in urban environments | Register closed |
Paper 1 How inadequate urban land regulation instruments exacerbate climate injustice | ||
Paper 2 Co-producing resilience: Lessons from bottom-up practices in informal settlements | ||
Paper 3 Extensions in disaster induced resettlement sites: A tool for placemaking in the urban peripheries | ||
Paper 4 Gram-Bangla: Exploring indigenous communities and marginalities in the Sundarbans | ||
Paper 5 Pigs in informalized and invisibilised caste ecologies in Delhi | ||
Paper 6 Navigating the urban stray dogs’ conundrum lying beyond the margins of planning and governance. | ||
1:15 pm – 2:30 pm | Lunch | |
2:30 pm – 4:15 pm | Panel 3 Making the city: State, space, and marginalities | Register closed |
Paper 1 Urbanisms and its imaginaries: Exploring the rise/emergence of an educational city in Sonipat | ||
Paper 2 Exploring urban marginalities: A comprehensive analysis of social inequities in cities | ||
Paper 3 Smart city built from scratch as democratic city? The case of the Lanseria Smart City | ||
Paper 4 Planning with/in exception: Urban governance and marginality in Kolar Gold Fields | ||
Paper 5 In the shadows of city-making: Exploring the articulation of spatial segregation in the city of Ahmedabad | ||
Paper 6 Capitalist state and space: Affirmative, reactionary and dialectical | ||
4:15 pm – 4:30 pm | Break | |
4:30 pm – 5:30 pm | Panel 4 Thinking aesthetics, law and informality in the ordering of the urban margins | Register closed |
5:30 pm – 5:45 pm | Break | |
5:45 pm – 7:30 pm | Panel 5 Thinking through Marginalities Aromar Revi, Director, IIHS Gautam Bhan, Associate Dean, IIHS School of Human Development Sudeshna Mitra, Associate Dean, IIHS Academics Shriya Anand, Associate Dean, IIHS School of Economic Development | Register closed |
Day 2 | 12 January 2024 | ||
9:30 am – 11:15 am | Panel 6 Urban housing dynamics: Inequities and social realities | Register closed |
Paper 1 Producing marginalities in the rental spaces of peri-urban Hyderabad city | ||
Paper 2 Social housing and social mobility of the urban poor transgender people: Positive deviants from resettlement sites of Chennai | ||
Paper 3 Understanding Bangalore’s urban growth pattern through the lens of gentrification: A spatio-temporal analysis | ||
Paper 4 Between surviving and thriving: The marginality of the urban homeless | ||
Paper 5 A portolan of marginalities: A case study of homeless in Rome | ||
Paper 6 The ghetto as ‘make-believe space’: On state discourses and contestations of urban marginality in Denmark’s social housing areas | ||
11:15 am – 11:30 am | Break | |
11:30 am – 1:15 pm | Panel 7 (In)formalities: Lived economics in the margins | Register closed
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Paper 1 Tracking marginal lives as a prehistory to platforms: GPS meters in autorickshaws, working class lives in Delhi | ||
Paper 2 Shifts in work relations: A study on how gig economy is shaping work relations of domestic workers in Pune | ||
Paper 3 Contours of marginalities and informal sector innovation: Comparative case study of three Indian informal vehicles a.k.a jugaad vehicles | ||
Paper 4 Navigating margins: Religious, gendered, and class-based resistance strategies among Muslim women in the informal labor markets | ||
Paper 5 Financial literacy and marginalized women’s engagement with formal financial institutions: The case of women domestic workers of Delhi NCR | ||
Paper 6 Unstable and uncertain: Informal settlements and the politics of policy categories in Guwahati city | ||
1:15 pm – 2:30 pm | Break | |
2:30 pm – 4:15 pm | Panel 8 Urban marginalities: Methods, design, and social change | Register closed |
Paper 1 Unmapping Kolkata: Urban history at the margins | ||
Paper 2 New social mix in Nantou ancient town in Shenzhen | ||
Paper 3 Mapping as a tool for social change: Exploring urban marginalities of female street vendors in Raghubir Nagar through a collaborative method | ||
Paper 4 Space, territory, time: A mapping method to capture the complexities and negotiations of everyday urban life | ||
Paper 5 The spatial type of servant quarters: Understanding their design and manifestation in apartment-type housing | ||
Paper 6 Marginalisation as an act of design | ||
4:15 pm – 4:30 pm | Break | |
4:30 pm – 6:30 pm | Panel 9 Activating the public role of universities: Engaging with marginality Azadeh Mashayekhi, The Bartlett Development Planning Unit | Register closed |
7 pm onwards | Dinner | |
Day 3 | 13 January 2024 | ||
9:30 am – 11:15 am | Panel 10 Gender in the city: Labour, aspirations, and marginalities | Register closed |
Paper 1 Researching the marginalities: Exploring Bajaar as a site of pollution, respectability, and marginality of women workers | ||
Paper 2 Gender norms and bargaining over childcare in urban areas: Case studies of working class women in the National Capital Region | ||
Paper 3 Women At work: Viewing the city of Ahmedabad from the perspective of women laborers | ||
Paper 4 Drivers of masculinity: marginality, manhood, and mobilities | ||
Paper 5 Failing the working mothers: Are women paying the price of motherhood in their commutes? | ||
Paper 6 Negotiating marginalities: Possibilities and aspirations on the site of higher education in contemporary India | ||
11:15 am – 11:30 am | Break | |
11:30 am – 1 pm | Panel 11 Urban services and systems: Marginalities in the Global South | Register closed |
Paper 1 Sanitation work and the politics of waste in Colonial Bombay | ||
Paper 2 Marginality, water and blood: Water infrastructure in Kusumpur Pahari and women’s menstrual practices in everyday life | ||
Paper 3 Dystopia in healthy urbanization permanent temporaries: Pathologies of illegalities | ||
Paper 4 Unfolding adolescent responsiveness of urban Primary Health Centres: A case study from Surat, India | ||
Paper 5 Planning for urban infrastructure of care in vulnerable neighbourhoods of the Global South | ||
1 pm – 2 pm | Lunch | |
2 pm – 3:15 pm | Panel 12 Representing marginalities: Images and imaginations | Register closed |
Paper 1 Understanding marginality and city-making through images and aesthetic governmentality: Childhood unfolding in the urban margins of Delhi | ||
Paper 2 Learning from action-research in museum spaces | ||
Paper 3 How short-form content app transformed the shape of Mumbai’s Marine Drive | ||
Paper 4 Visibilising marginalised lives in Delhi and Mumbai through literary nonfiction: The case of Aman Sethi and Sonia Faleiro | ||
3:15 pm – 3:30 pm | Break | |
3:30 pm – 5:00 pm | Panel 13 Living Off-Grid Food & Infrastructure Collaboration (LOGIC): (Re)Thinking the Off Grid City Sudeshna Mitra, Indian Institute for Human Settlements Vrashali Khandelwal, Indian Institute for Human Settlements Iromi Perera, Colombo Urban Lab Herry Gulabani, Indian Institute for Human Settlements Nicholas Nisbett, Research Fellow, IDS Sussex Hayley MacGregor, Research Fellow, IDS Sussex Jodie Thorpe, Research Fellow, IDS Sussex Dolf te Lintelo, Research Fellow, IDS Sussex Gareth Haysom, Senior Researcher, African Centre for Cities Issahaka Fuseini, Researcher, University of Ghana
| Register closed |
5:00 pm – 5:15 pm | Break | |
5:15 pm – 7:00 pm | Panel 14 Social marginalities: Identities and negotiated spaces | Register closed |
Paper 1 Muslim in Indian cities: Landscapes of belongingness | ||
Paper 2 Sexuality at the margins: Understanding space, self and agency of men who have sex with men (MSM) in Lucknow, Uttar Pradesh | ||
Paper 3 Marginal religious spaces and dissonant heritage: Negotiating adaptive agencies at mausoleums and dargahs in Dhaka and Delhi | ||
Paper 4 Discriminatory developments: Unveiling marginalization in revitalized public spaces in Dhaka City | ||
Paper 5 Unpacking marginalities: Manipur in the context of rest of India |