This project poses the question of how authoritarian politics systems institutionalise themselves through everyday life. While there has been a rise in authoritarian politics across the African continent over the last decade, there is little understanding of how authoritarianism is actually experienced on the ground, and why ordinary citizens come to support these systems Focused on one neighbourhood in Angola’s capital, Luanda, this project uses historical and anthropological methods to to understand the workings of official and unofficial governance practices in the neighbourhood. It thereby investigates how the state works at a local level, how people develop relationships to governance institutions, and through this, how the authoritarian nature of Angola’s political system shapes everyday life. Drawing on literature in political anthropology, urban studies, and African Studies, it contributes to African scholarship by providing insights into the quotidian workings of authoritarianism on the continent and with that an understanding of its limits.
Project
Everyday Authoritarianism: Urban Life and Politics in Luanda, Angola
Related to Everyday Authoritarianism: Urban Life and Politics in Luanda, Angola
Publication
‘If Angola were Libya’: protest and politics in Angola
Gastrow, Claudia. 2022. ‘If Angola were Libya’: protest and politics in Angola. Transformation: Critical Perspectives on Southern Africa, 108(1), 11–34. ht...
Event
STIAS Lecture Series 2019: Claudia Gastrow - The Discomforts of Home: Class, Infrastructure and Aesthesis in Luanda, Angola
Claudia Gastrow, Lecturer in Anthropologyat the University of Johannesburgand STIAS Iso Lomso fellowwill present a talk with the title: The Discomforts of Home: Class, Infrastructure and Aesthesis in Luanda, Angola Abstract This talk investigates how infrastructures – both official and unofficial – are the objects through which residents of Luanda experience exclusion and status.
Article
Second Iso Lomso cohort selected
STIAS is pleased to announce its second cohort for the Iso Lomso Fellowships for Early Career African Researchers.
Article
Material politics - Fellows' seminar by Claudia Gastrow
Property, belonging and ‘licit ownership’ in Luanda, Angola How is property recognised outside of official laws and regulations?
Article
Socialist remains: Rethinking African urbanism from Luanda’s ‘Cuban buildings’ - Fellows' seminar by Claudia Gastrow
This presentation outlines the beginning of a book project which focuses on what Angolans call the ‘Cuban buildings’, mid-rise apartment blocks designed and built by Cubans in Luanda during the 1980s.