‘Sleep Occupies No Space’: The Use of Public Space by Street Gangs in Kinshasa

Country
No data
Region
West Africa
Language
English
Year Published
2009
Author
Kristien Geenen
Organisation
No data
Topics
Research, data collection and evidence Shelter
Summary

This article is published in Africa: Journal of the International African Institute and is available to read free online with a free JSTOR personal account.

This article deals with issues of territoriality, public space, the microphysics of power and street gang life in the current urban context of Kinshasa, capital of the Democratic Republic of Congo. In this city, a growing number of street children invade the public places. They team up in gangs and scour the streets in search of a location to settle (for a while). Along with their appropriation of public space, these gangs encounter several actors such as the city authorities, shop owners, tenants or rival street gangs. Before any settlement, deals have to be closed since every inch of the city is negotiable. All participants get involved in these negotiations, for no one is considered marginal, certainly not the street youth who are inextricably bound up with Congolese society. This contribution considers this dynamic field of negotiations through a focus on space and analyses it from a Foucauldian angle. It explores how gang members develop particular ways to control their territories and exercise power in them. Additionally, it examines how street youths manage to construct a home in the streets and make sense of their urban environment in the process.

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