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Decolonial informal urban futures

CSS Publication Number
CSS26-30
Full Publication Date
June 6, 2026
Abstract

Urban informality scholarship is concerned with injustice and antidemocratic practices. It addresses these issues by engaging with and critiquing urban displacement, inequality, and exclusionary governance. Decoloniality is present in this scholarship, but it has not been used as a theoretical and applied approach to intervene in urban informality. This paper addresses this gap by arguing that decoloniality should become central to how we understand and address urban development in the Global South. Colonial urban planning norms of the twentieth century continue to shape contemporary urbanization. This harms inclusive governance and renders informality undesirable and unworkable. We bring together existing debates on decoloniality to challenge this orthodoxy and introduce the concept of “decolonial informal urban futures” to do so. We advocate for novel theoretical approaches and applied methods that work with, rather than against, informality to develop heterodox explorations of decoloniality and urbanization.

Co-Author(s)
Oluwafemi Ayodeji Olajide
Patrick Brandful Cobbinah
Research Areas
Urban Systems and Built Environment
Framework, Methods & Tools
Impacts & Burdens
Keywords

Global South; informality; decoloniality; urban planning; urbanization

Publication Type
Journal Article
Digital Object Identifier
DOI: 10.1080/02723638.2026.2676280
Full Citation

Oluwafemi Ayodeji Olajide, Brandon Marc Finn & Patrick Brandful
Cobbinah (06 Jun 2026): Decolonial informal urban futures, Urban Geography, DOI:
10.1080/02723638.2026.2676280. CSS26-30