The Case for City-level Innovation Ecosystems in Africa

The Case for City-level Innovation Ecosystems in Africa

Please join us for the next Dean's lecture with Professor Edgar Pieters, Director, African Centre for Cities, Cape Town.

By Melbourne School of Design

Date and time

Starts on Tue, 30 Jul 2024 7:00 PM AEST

Location

Lecture Theatre 1 (B117), Glyn Davis Building, The University of Melbourne

Parkville Campus Melbourne, VIC 3010 Australia

About this event

  • 1 hour

Amidst dramatic urban expansion, sustainable urbanism imperatives in Africa and the global South cannot be addressed through conventional urban development policy frameworks. However, it is difficult to fathom what constitutes an appropriate sustainable urbanisation policy canvass amidst persistent systemic inequalities and moribund institutional architectures and hollow political discourse.

In this lecture, Professor Pieterse will explore the dimensions of a working canvas that can accommodate emergent urban experiments in Africa and resonate with global discourses aimed at deciphering urban transitions that are just, culturally-attuned and resonant.

About the speaker

Professor Edgar Pieterse is the founding director of the African Centre for Cities (ACC) at the University of Cape Town. His research and teaching explore urban imaginaries, alternative futures, sustainable urban infrastructure, place-making, public cultures, responsive design and adaptive governance systems. He publishes different kinds of text, curate exhibitions, as well as difficult conversations about pressing urban problems. Since the founding of ACC, he has published two books, City Futures (Zed, 2008) and New Urban Worlds (Polity, 2017, with AbdouMaliq Simone), as well as nine co-edited books, dealing with a wide-ranging set of topics related to contemporary urbanism and place-making.

Professor Pieterse’s scholarship is animated by a need to make sense of the ways in which climate change, multi-dimensional inequality, informality, governance and technology intersect in urban spaces, especially in Africa and cities of the global South. Of course, this sensemaking is somewhat futile due to the implied complexities, but also essential to figure out what a grounded, yet radical imagination of alternative urban futures might entail. More pointedly, he is curious what multiple solutions and pathways for advancing sustainable and vibrant cities might involve as acts of exploration and doing. Thus, his research is informed by emergent experiments with alternative forms of doing, organising, regulating and social narration. Conceptually, he locates his research, teaching, and curatorial work at the intersection of critical urban theory, open systems approaches, design-based methods, technological intermediation and aesthetics.

Organised by

The Faculty of Architecture, Building and Planning, incorporating the Melbourne School of Design (MSD), is a creative and people-oriented built environment faculty in Australia’s leading research-intensive university.