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7 - Urban Development and the Politics of Expropriation

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  21 September 2023

Tom Lavers
Affiliation:
University of Manchester

Summary

The EPRDF sought to delay urbanisation until it had delivered industrialisation as a means of preventing the political instability that it feared would accompany mass urban unemployment. However, faced with a growing urban population and urban political opposition in the early 2000s, the EPRDF brought urban areas to the centre of its development strategy. The ‘developmental state’ used control of finance and land to direct investment to industry, construction and infrastructure, much of which was located in urban centres. This chapter examines how the state’s efforts to accelerate structural transformation through urban development exacerbated the emerging distributive crisis resulting from the shortage of land and employment. Analysis focuses on case studies of Adama – one of the largest secondary cities – and the capital, Addis Ababa. State expropriation of peasants to make way for urban development exacerbated demographic factors that were already undermining land access. Urbanisation constituted a highly visible expression of the inequality of the ‘developmental state’, which, when overlaid on historically embedded ethnic divisions in Addis Ababa, proved an explosive combination.

Information

Figure 0

Figure 7.1 Urban population growthNote: figures are available for individual cities for 1994, 2007 and 2015. Figures for other years are estimated based on these.

Source: author, based on CSA (1994, 2008), Ethiopia’s New Climate Economy Partnership (2015), World Development Indicators.
Figure 1

Figure 7.2 Past and predicted population growth in Adama City

Sources: author, based on (CSA 1994, 2008, Ethiopia’s New Climate Economy Partnership 2015, p. 27).
Figure 2

Figure 7.3 Adama and surrounding area

Source: author.
Figure 3

Figure 7.4 Addis Ababa and surrounding area

Source: author.

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