Infrastructuring (in)Justice: Navigating the Built Environment-Conflict Nexus (Part II)

Thursday, 10 July 2025: 11:00-12:45
Location: FSE023 (Faculty of Education Sciences (FSE))
RC43 Housing and Built Environment (host committee)

Language: English

This session explores how the built environment—through housing, infrastructure, and heritage—functions as both a site of resistance and a battleground for urban justice in cities marked by conflict. This encompasses various forms of social, economic, political, and environmental conflicts that arise or are influenced by decisions, policies, and practices related to urban development. Navigating the built environment-conflict nexus, we seek to reflect on housing, infrastructure, and heritage, as material and immaterial structures mirroring larger social and political conflicts, and revealing entrenched disparities in access to resources, and to deepen our understanding of how the built environment can mitigate or exacerbate conflicts within communities or societies, e.g., causing ‘infrastructural harm’. Against this backdrop, we invite contributions on, but not limited to, the following themes and questions: (i) (Post-)Conflict urban justice: How do housing, heritage, and infrastructures facilitate or hinder peacebuilding and reconciliation in (post-) conflict-affected cities? How does preservation or neglect of cultural heritage impact social healing and slow violence? (ii) Infrastructure as a catalyst for socio-environmental (in)equality: How do infrastructure fuel disparities, and/or environmental (in)justice? What are the intersections of infrastructure with political and cultural tensions? (iii) In what ways does the ‘conflict potential of concrete’–as a metaphor of how tourism infrastructure shapes and sometimes destabilizes local communities—manifest in tourism development, affecting social and environmental sustainability in destination cities? To discuss key insights into the built environment-conflict nexus, this session welcomes case studies and comparative analyses from diverse regional contexts.
Session Organizers:
Helena CERMENO MEDIAVILLA, University of Kassel, Germany and Katja MIELKE, Bicc, Germany
Chair:
Helena CERMENO MEDIAVILLA, University of Kassel, Germany
Oral Presentations
Land Rights through Infrastructure: The Role of Water and Mobility Delivery in Practices of Land Formalisation in Arequipa, Peru
Christian ROSEN, Technical University Darmstadt, Germany; Nina GRIBAT, Brandenburg University of Technology, Germany
Large Housing Complexes at the Outskirts As a Destination for Displaced Communities: A Major Urban Problem in Brazilian Metropolises: The Case of Fortaleza (Ce)
Luis Renato BEZERRA PEQUENO, Universidade Federal do Ceará, Brazil; Sara ROSA, Laboratório de Estudos da Habitação UFC, Brazil
Between Political Resistance, Care, and Emotions: Life Stories of Women from Urban Peripheries in Chile
Elizabeth ZENTENO TORRES, Universidad de Playa Ancha, Chile; Graciela LUNEKE, Pontificia Universidad Católica de Chile, Chile; Javier RUIZ-TAGLE, Pontificia Universidad Católica de Chile, Chile
Hostels in South Africa: Continuity and Change
Nomkhosi GAMA, University of Cape Town, South Africa
Distributed Papers
Can Money Compensate: Voices from the Periphery, Lahore
Huda JAVAID, Heidelberg University, Pakistan