Housing in the Margins. Hanna Hilbrandt

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into their allotments over the summer and subletting their apartments during that time. In particular, Chapter 4 offers a rich empirical account of how and why gardeners take up residence within allotment huts. On the one hand, it illustrates the entanglement of formal and informal housing in the dwelling biographies of the allotment’s residents. On the other hand, it explores how residents experience their housing conditions in widely varying ways.

      Negotiating Formalities: Postcolonial Urbanism, Informality, and the State

      Beyond empirical questions about housing precarity, this book wrestles with the theoretical implications of allotment dwelling and its regulation for an understanding of informality in cities that are commonly understood to regulate thoroughly, coherently, and according to fixed rules. For decades, scholars have argued that informality was a “problem” of the South, in quantity at least, if not in sheer existence. It was seen, as Auerbach et al. put it, as “perhaps the distinguishing feature of contemporary urban life in the Global South” (Auerbach et al., 2018: 262). Yet, informal housing in Berlin’s allotments can hardly be understood as a shift in the geographies of power that has fostered the growth of this allegedly Southern phenomenon in a European city – not least because it has had a century-long tradition in Berlin. Rather, an analysis of informality in a relatively rich city of the global North calls for a critical reflection of the concept of informality itself, as well as of the epistemological place and value of that concept in a more global urban analysis.4

      As noted, today’s more prudent use of the concept of informality in most parts of interdisciplinary urban scholarship has developed a nuanced understanding of the multiple entanglements of informality and the state. First, authors have placed a spotlight on the ways in which the state itself acts informally: by the rule of exception – in other words, suspending the validity of its own order (Roy, 2009a, 2011; Wigle, 2014; Davis, 2018), and by maintaining flexibility in regulation, thereby leaving its citizens in a state of “permanent temporariness” (Yiftachel, 2009a: 90). For instance, Ananya Roy suggests that informality is not a result of planning failure but a mode of urbanization in which “the law itself is rendered open-ended and subject to multiple interpretations and interests” (Roy, 2009b: 80). Moreover, discussions of informality and the state have considered the relation between the two through questions about citizenship, insurgency, and multiple other modalities of struggle and subversion (Miraftab, 2009; Meth, 2010; Porter et al., 2011). In these debates, the state is central as the primary object of contention – an antagonistic force working through the powers of oppression and domination.

      First, by placing weight on the normative judgments, subjective understanding, and social embeddedness of governing actors, Housing in the Margins reads informality and its regulation through the ways in which people apply their ambivalent and multiple understandings to processes of governance. For instance, this becomes apparent in Chapter 7, which focuses on the legal work upon which practices of governance rely. Utilizing critical legal studies, the chapter unravels how both regulators and allotment holders employ legal frameworks in regulatory practices to maintain, extend, or restrict outsized huts. Yet, while such frameworks of order constitute a pivotal resource in the making of order, the chapter discusses their operation in practice to understand how order is built through the interpretive mechanisms that shape how rules become “emplaced.” In this way, the book seeks a more practice-centered understanding of the interpretive work through which rules operate “on the ground.” This fosters an understanding of informality as emerging through the “ordinary stuff” of policy implementation, in which subjectivity, positionality, and individual agency are key.

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