Making Lilongwe urban: the production of inequalities within the centralized water supply network
By Maria Rusca
This paper takes the production of inequalities within the centralized water supply network of Lilongwe, Malawi, as a starting point to examine how Africa’s water infrastructures are shaping urban spaces and lives. First, by tracing the expansions of the distribution network and the strategic locations of service reservoirs over a period of 50 years, we examine the role of water infrastructure in co-shaping and mediating inequities in Lilongwe. Engaging with the technical intricacies of designing water infrastructures, we argue, helps illuminating motivations and guiding principles of Lilongwe’s development trajectory. Our analysis reveals how large water infrastructures (e.g. dams) were developed to improve continuity of supply of higher income residents, rather than to serve the growing unserved urban population in informal settlements. Second, eschewing conceptualisations of infrastructure as fixed material artefacts, we then focus on infrastructures ‘in use’, showing how operation and maintenance intersect with infrastructural configurations and contribute to produce highly differentiated water supply across the city. We show how the prioritisation of certain areas and consumers is rationalised through the idea of the so-called 'premium customer', a citizen who needs and deserves more water than others. Last, we discuss how materials not only embody but also change social relations of power and remakes urban experiences, contributing to further our understanding of how inequities in access to water come about and endure. This paper thereby also serves as a demonstration of how an interdisciplinary approach to the study of (water) infrastructures can serve to further analyses of urbanism and water supplies.
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