TY - JOUR
T1 - Sand urbanism in Bangladesh transitions of sand extraction and trade in Dhaka-Narayanganj
AU - Rahman, Mohammad Atique
AU - Suykens, Bert
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2023 Elsevier Ltd
PY - 2023/6
Y1 - 2023/6
N2 - Sand is shaping and has shaped urban development in many parts of the world. Developing the concept of sand urbanism, this paper aims to understand the recursive constitution of sand extraction and urbanity. We show that sand mining has fundamentally shaped the urban environment, but that the urban environment has equally impacted on sand extraction. Building on literature on the relation between mining and urban development, we show how opportunities and displacement are central to urban relations to sand. Going beyond this literature which has focused extensively on (boom)towns, of which mining is their raison d’être, by looking at large urban centres and sand extraction. Drawing on the concept of sand transitions, we distinguish four phases in the forty-year engagement with sand of our field site in Dhaka-Narayanganj. we focus on sand infilling and the creation of urban land, manual labour opportunities in artisanal mining and bulkhead unloading, as well as cycles of mechanization which have displaced manual labour. We also show that while urban development made on-site sand extraction difficult, the continued demand of sand in the conurbation allowed the transformation of our research site from a sand extraction to a sand trading site, offering connections to new, more peripheral sand boomtowns.
AB - Sand is shaping and has shaped urban development in many parts of the world. Developing the concept of sand urbanism, this paper aims to understand the recursive constitution of sand extraction and urbanity. We show that sand mining has fundamentally shaped the urban environment, but that the urban environment has equally impacted on sand extraction. Building on literature on the relation between mining and urban development, we show how opportunities and displacement are central to urban relations to sand. Going beyond this literature which has focused extensively on (boom)towns, of which mining is their raison d’être, by looking at large urban centres and sand extraction. Drawing on the concept of sand transitions, we distinguish four phases in the forty-year engagement with sand of our field site in Dhaka-Narayanganj. we focus on sand infilling and the creation of urban land, manual labour opportunities in artisanal mining and bulkhead unloading, as well as cycles of mechanization which have displaced manual labour. We also show that while urban development made on-site sand extraction difficult, the continued demand of sand in the conurbation allowed the transformation of our research site from a sand extraction to a sand trading site, offering connections to new, more peripheral sand boomtowns.
KW - Cities
KW - Labour
KW - Mechanization
KW - Sand mining
KW - Sand trade
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U2 - 10.1016/j.exis.2023.101265
DO - 10.1016/j.exis.2023.101265
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85159473602
SN - 2214-790X
VL - 14
JO - Extractive Industries and Society
JF - Extractive Industries and Society
M1 - 101265
ER -