Gaborone
2011; Elsevier BV; Volume: 28; Issue: 5 Linguagem: Inglês
10.1016/j.cities.2010.11.004
ISSN1873-6084
AutoresAnthony Kent, Horatius Ikgopoleng,
Tópico(s)HIV/AIDS oral health manifestations
ResumoThe city of Gaborone, like Botswana, the nation of which it is capital, is extraordinary in African terms. Here is a city lacking in mass poverty, extensive squatter settlements or recurrent civil strife: for all appearances, an orderly, affluent urban area. For these reasons, it is an important example of how planning authorities in a developing nation have managed urban growth. Gaborone has had opportunities other African cities have not. Thus it invites questions as to how these have been managed and expressed. A key issue which emerges is the co-location of informal, traditional and modern forms of land allocation both within Gaborone City and the peri-urban regions with which it is increasingly connected. This throws up a number of issues, including the inconsistent way in which planning authorities have managed this ‘balancing act’.
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