Tag Archives: community development

Gardens in the City (I): Community Gardening

Prinzessinnengarten

Photo: Prinzessinnengarten

by Markus Kather

Despite (or because of) the grey Berlin winter, I was thinking about green spaces lately. Urban gardening and urban gardens became one of the top issues in urbanism: as a (planner’s) strategy to deal with transformations in society and texture of the city and as an emancipatory movement of citizens. In a mini-series I want to shed light on some of the phenomena by having a closer look at different types of urban gardens and urban nature. From subsistence farming in Asian and Latin American Megacities to guerrilla gardening and green rooftops in European and American cities: urban gardens are a worldwide movement. In this first part, I want to focus on community gardening projects. What is their impact on urban society? I take example from Berlin and Detroit to see how the gardens are building community and how they are used as a means to deal with changing cities.  Continue reading

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The Zabbaleen – Functional Informal Waste Management in Cairo – Part II

By Jakob Hebsaker and Renard Teipelke*

In our first article, we introduced the waste management system in Cairo. Now, we want to shed light on recent developments and further implications for the future.

The waste management system in Cairo knows three important groups: the Wahis (license owners and fee collectors), the Zabbaleen (waste collectors and sorters), the Mo’allimin (recycling processors and resellers; former Zabbaleen). Focusing on the two opposing groups – the Wahis and the Zabbaleen – one has to underscore that the Wahis are an influential, well-educated group in the Cairene society, while the Zabbaleen are socially marginalized. Most of the 60,000 Zabbaleen are Coptic Christians and are thus part of a religious-social minority in Egypt. However, the recycling business is profitable for all stakeholders and even the Zabbaleen are in a relatively better position than other low-income groups in Cairo. Nevertheless, because of their dependence of the Wahis and their marginalized role in the Egyptian society, the Zabbaleen have only low social and economic capital as well as little political leverage. Furthermore, they are living in currently six informal neighborhoods (slum settlements), such as Manshiyat Nasser (aka Garbage City) in the outskirts of Cairo at the base of Mokattam Hill.

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The Zabbaleen – Functional Informal Waste Management in Cairo – Part I

By Jakob Hebsaker and Renard Teipelke*

Waste management might belong to those urban issues that are best managed when we do not recognize them. Once we are complaining about dirty streets or overflowing trash cans, we are reminded of hidden waste management being a true backbone of the urban system. In Cairo, Egypt, the waste management system has its roots in the 1880s. Former oasis inhabitants, the Wahis, were migrating into Cairo and started to earn their living by picking up the waste of every household and selling it to public baths which used the waste for heating. After oil heating replaced the waste burning in the 1920s, the Wahis began to sell the waste to Coptic immigrants from the South of Egypt which used the organic waste of the trash for feeding their pigs. Continue reading

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Place and Place Management

by Ares Kalandides

I was browsing through the site of the Institute of Place Management to understand how they define it and found the following definiton (which I re-write in my own words): Continue reading

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