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PREFIGURING PRAGMATICALLY? Prefigurative Politics and the Constellation of People Power Strategies for Winning Affordable Housing in Cape Town

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  • Amanda Tattersall
  • Kurt Iveson

Abstract

This article contributes to ongoing discussions about the practice of prefigurative politics by urban social movements, and the relationship between prefiguration and other political practices. We argue that urban social movements can deploy prefigurative power in combination with other political strategies with which it is often contrasted and opposed. To demonstrate, we explore Cape Town's Reclaim the City movement that occupied several inner‐city buildings to create affordable housing for low‐wage Black communities—prefiguring the kind of affordable housing that they were demanding. They developed this strategy iteratively after having tried to play by the rules through litigation and mobilize through protest. When those approaches failed to shift decision makers, they tried to prefigure their goal for housing through occupation. Prefiguration offered distinctive strategic advantages: it helped demonstrate that affordable housing was possible and provided direct relief for people facing housing stress. These advantages not only engaged new participants but contributed to new affordable housing commitments from the City of Cape Town and the courts. We show how movement participants understood their prefigurative occupation as part of a constellation of people power strategies and suggest that this points towards the potential for prefiguration to be deployed pragmatically as well as ideologically by urban social movements.

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  • Amanda Tattersall & Kurt Iveson, 2024. "PREFIGURING PRAGMATICALLY? Prefigurative Politics and the Constellation of People Power Strategies for Winning Affordable Housing in Cape Town," International Journal of Urban and Regional Research, Wiley Blackwell, vol. 48(3), pages 423-441, May.
  • Handle: RePEc:bla:ijurrs:v:48:y:2024:i:3:p:423-441
    DOI: 10.1111/1468-2427.13235
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    1. Amelia Thorpe, 2023. "PREFIGURATIVE INFRASTRUCTURE: Mobility, Citizenship, and the Agency of Objects," International Journal of Urban and Regional Research, Wiley Blackwell, vol. 47(2), pages 183-199, March.
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    4. Amanda Tattersall & Kurt Iveson, 2023. "Urban people power strategies in a connected world: exploring the patterns of practice, exchange, translation and learning," City, Taylor & Francis Journals, vol. 27(5-6), pages 962-984, November.
    5. Nobukhosi Ngwenya & Liza Rose Cirolia, 2021. "Conflicts Between and Within: The ‘Conflicting Rationalities’ of Informal Occupation in South Africa," Planning Theory & Practice, Taylor & Francis Journals, vol. 22(5), pages 691-706, October.
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