Housing in the Margins. Hanna Hilbrandt

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some of the payoffs of exploring informal housing in this way, this approach provides an alternative reading of informality – one in which informality emerges out of the normalcy through which the state routinely becomes performed. In this reading, regulation and transgression depend on the subjective experience of all governing agents who juggle multiple and frequently contradictory legal orders, and where transgression and regulation frequently do not take place following formally subscribed roles. But to come to this conclusion, let me sketch out this approach and how it shapes our understanding of informality. This book’s subsequent chapters will add empirical detail and theoretical depth to different facets of the approach.

      Today’s more relational and interpretive approaches to policy implementation have sharpened the view on the agency of workers in public services (Lea, 2008; Hunter, 2015; Dobson, 2020). These approaches displace the distinctions between individuals in public policy and the social and institutional “systems” in which they work by reference to their embeddedness in and through multi-scalar social relations, interactions, and structures. Consider, for instance, Shona Hunter’s (2015: 24) conceptualization of “relational politics”:

      By relational politics I am referring to the dynamic emotional process through which social categories such as gender and ethnicity get lived out, resignified and resisted in the everyday policy process and the ways they act back to reconfigure that very process itself. Thus I am claiming that despite its “under the surface,” “hidden” character, relational politics is a powerful driver for the shape of the state, the distribution of power and inequality in “it” and through “it.” (2015: 24, emphasis in original)

      By tightly entangling the lived experience of practitioners and the structures of the state, Hunter’s reading of relational politics suggests two conclusions: First, this understanding renders the state open to everyday transformations. In her relational reading, policy enactment is a pre- and refigurative process, one in which practitioners effectively shape the structures that they enact. Second, a relational view on processes of regulation complicates notions of public officials. In this perspective, policy actors are, as Rachael Dobson vividly argues, neither “cast as institutional automatons who fail to resist because they don’t or can’t know any better given the saturating power of hegemonic neoliberal governmentalities” nor high-minded do-gooders, “actors doing what they can in difficult circumstances” (2020: 4). Instead, this reading lends itself to imagining street-level bureaucrats, as Dobson notes elsewhere, as “critically humanistic actors: people with varied perspectives who exercise power and agency, and who apply multiple, ambivalent and contested meanings to their constructed worlds” (2015: 694).

      Focusing on the state as negotiated in sites and processes of regulation also implies recognizing, as a more permanent feature of governing, that rules are ambiguous and frequently uncoupled from the situations to which they ostensibly apply. Socio-legal scholars have gone a long way in documenting the plurality of the law and its dependence on legal interpretive practices (Blomley, 1988, 2014; Blomley et al., 2001; Valverde, 2009, 2011, 2012; Delaney, 2010). For instance, as Chapter 7 discusses in depth, for critical legal scholar Boaventura de Sousa Santos, the law only loosely applies to the complexities of all possible real-world situations, as it results from processes of scaling up, projecting, and symbolizing such complexity in ways that provide abstractions that apply to the law’s entire jurisdiction. In further complicating the relation between the law and specific sites, critical legal studies assume the coexistence of various legal conventions on the same territory (for example, national law, urban regulations, and local normative orders), thereby undermining the narrow conception of legal formalism (Butler, 2009: 316), i.e. the binary determinism of legality and illegality. Rather, following de Sousa Santos, “we live in a time of porous legality or of legal porosity, multiple networks of legal orders forcing us to constant transition and trespassing” (2002: 437).

      Studying informality by focusing on the everyday negotiation of rules asks us to bring those typically not understood as doing governing work into the analytical frame. And it requires us to include them in ways that go beyond describing the antagonistic relations between state actors employing more “centered” modalities

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