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Cityscapes of Hunting and Fishing: Yoruba Place-Making and Cultural Heritage for a Sustainable Urban Vision

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  • Joseph Adeniran Adedeji

    (Department of Architecture, Federal University of Technology, Akure 460114, Nigeria)

  • Liora Bigon

    (School of Architecture, Ariel University, Ariel 40700, Israel)

Abstract

Literature on African urbanism has generally lacked insight into the significant roles of hunters and fishers as city founders. This has resulted in a knowledge gap regarding the cultural foundation of the cities that could enhance policy frameworks for sustainable urban governance. This article examines corollaries related to the complementarities of hunting and urbanism with case studies from the ethno-linguistic Yoruba region in southwestern Nigeria. Through qualitative methodologies involving ethnography and the (oral) history of landscapes of hunting from the pre-colonial and (British) colonial periods, as well as tracing the current cultural significance of hunting in selected Yoruba cities, the article reveals data that identify hunters and fishers as city founders. It shows that hunting, as a lived heritage, continues to be interlaced with cultural urban practices and Yoruba cosmology and that within this cultural imagery and belief, hunters remain key actors in nature conservation, contributing to socio-cultural capital, economic sustainability, and urban security structures. The article concludes with recommendations for strategies to reconnect with these value systems in rapidly westernizing urban Africa. These reconnections include the re-sacralization of desacralized landscapes of hunting, revival of cultural ideologies, decolonization from occidental conceptions, and re-definition of urbanism and place-making in light of African perspectives despite globalization. In doing so, the article contributes to a deeper understanding of the interconnections between the environmental and societal components of sustainability theory, agenda, and practice in urban contexts; underscores the societal value of lived heritage, cultural heritage, and cultural capital within the growing literature on urban social sustainability; and sheds more light on southern geographies within the social sustainability discourse, a field of study that still disproportionately reflects the global northwest.

Suggested Citation

  • Joseph Adeniran Adedeji & Liora Bigon, 2024. "Cityscapes of Hunting and Fishing: Yoruba Place-Making and Cultural Heritage for a Sustainable Urban Vision," Sustainability, MDPI, vol. 16(19), pages 1-23, September.
  • Handle: RePEc:gam:jsusta:v:16:y:2024:i:19:p:8494-:d:1488921
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    References listed on IDEAS

    as
    1. Liora Bigon & Edna Langenthal, 2023. "How Sustainable Is Our Urban Social-Sustainability Theory?," Sustainability, MDPI, vol. 15(10), pages 1-7, May.
    2. Fujita, Masahisa & Mori, Tomoya, 1996. "The role of ports in the making of major cities: Self-agglomeration and hub-effect," Journal of Development Economics, Elsevier, vol. 49(1), pages 93-120, April.
    3. Dorotea Ottaviani & Merve Demiröz & Hanna Szemző & Claudia De Luca, 2023. "Adapting Methods and Tools for Participatory Heritage-Based Tourism Planning to Embrace the Four Pillars of Sustainability," Sustainability, MDPI, vol. 15(6), pages 1-26, March.
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