Private cities, land, and the transformation of Africa’s urban fringe
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Urban Geography
Abstract
This paper explores the effects of large-scale land deals for a private
city development project in Ghana—the Appolonia City of Light.
From the conceptual lens of accumulation by dispossession, the
This article sheds light on the new forms of urban inequalities that
arise from this project. It is argued that land acquisition for urban
development has exacerbated existing inequalities and
transformed the socioeconomic, spatial, and institutional context
of the community. The project is beneficial to multinational
corporations that accumulate through “sweet land deals”
legitimized by the state. At the community level, there is a
centralization of wealth among local elites who brokered such
deals to make economic and political gains. Conversely,
livelihoods dependent on the environment suffer dispossession in
various forms. First, the loss of farmlands creates livelihood
uncertainties. Second, the commodification of communal land
disrupts social relations, land tenure arrangements and
exacerbates chieftaincy disputes in the community
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Research Article
