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City in Africa II: Urban Environmental Health

Pandemic urbanization: How South Africa’s history of labor and disease control creates its current disparities

Pages 616-629 | Published online: 26 Sep 2022
 

ABSTRACT

The COVID-19 pandemic highlights the need for scholars to rethink how cities and urban spaces create and reproduce disproportionate social outcomes. The social, economic, and public health effects of the COVID-19 pandemic in South Africa have been shaped by the country’s legacy of “pandemic urbanization.” Pandemic urbanization refers to the use of urban space as a mechanism to create social, economic, and racialized divides in the name of pandemic control. Illness and infectious disease are used as instruments for segregation, and as justification for segregation through spatial policies. Through a systematic review and synthesis of peer-reviewed literature, this paper argues that the early urbanization of pre-apartheid South Africa, which is intimately tied to the control of bubonic plague, tuberculosis, and Spanish influenza outbreaks in the early 20th century, is central to the country’s current inequalities, including those brought into stark relief by COVID-19. It shows that methods of labor and infectious disease control worked in tandem to structure South African spatial division. In doing so, this paper synthesizes important literature to tie the production of South African urban space to the active creation of categories of “race.” South Africa’s historical geography informs global discussions on racial capitalism, as the country’s past illustrates a process well beyond its borders. Given the centrality of urbanization and space within this history, a theorization highlighting spatial justice should be at the heart of pandemic and post-pandemic responses.

Acknowledgments

The author would like to thank the editor and anonymous reviewers for their thorough engagement and constructive feedback on earlier versions of this manuscript.

Disclosure statement

No potential conflict of interest was reported by the author(s).

Additional information

Funding

This work was supported by the American Association of Geographers and the International Journal of Urban and Regional Research (IJURR Foundation).

Notes on contributors

Brandon Marc Finn

Brandon Marc Finn is a Postdoctoral Research Fellow and Lecturer at the School for Environment and Sustainability at the University of Michigan. He holds a PhD in Urban Planning from Harvard University. His research focuses on African urbanization and deals with topics such as informality, spatial inequality, and sustainability in urban environments.

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