Garbage Citizenship: Vital Infrastructures of Labor in Dakar, Senegal

Garbage Citizenship: Vital Infrastructures of Labor in Dakar, Senegal

by RosalindFredericks (Author)

Synopsis

Over the last twenty-five years, garbage infrastructure in Dakar, Senegal, has taken center stage in the struggles over government, the value of labor, and the dignity of the working poor. Through strikes and public dumping, Dakar's streets have been periodically inundated with household garbage as the city's trash collectors and ordinary residents protest urban austerity. Often drawing on discourses of Islamic piety, garbage activists have provided a powerful language to critique a neoliberal mode of governing-through-disposability and assert rights to fair labor. In Garbage Citizenship Rosalind Fredericks traces Dakar's volatile trash politics to recalibrate how we understand urban infrastructure by emphasizing its material, social, and affective elements. She shows how labor is a key component of infrastructural systems and how Dakar's residents use infrastructures as a vital tool for forging collective identities and mobilizing political action. Fleshing out the materiality of trash and degraded labor, Fredericks illuminates the myriad ways waste can be a potent tool of urban control and rebellion.

$132.48

Quantity

20+ in stock

More Information

Format: Illustrated
Pages: 224
Edition: Illustrated
Publisher: Duke University Press Books
Published: 28 Sep 2018

ISBN 10: 1478000996
ISBN 13: 9781478000990

Media Reviews
Garbage Citizenship is a major intervention that proposes new ways of thinking about religion, labor, community, and citizenship at the intersections of public health and the political economy of garbage collection disposal, infrastructures, and workforce. It's an engaging and perceptive ethnography of material desires and ethical contradictions examined through the stories of the various actors involved in the municipal and state politics in the era of neoliberal reform. --Mamadou Diouf, Columbia University
Author Bio
Rosalind Fredericks is Associate Professor of Geography and Development Studies at New York University and coeditor of The Arts of Citizenship in African Cities: Infrastructures and Spaces of Belonging and Les arts de la citoyennete au Senegal: Espaces contestes et civilites urbaines.