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Ten - Value extraction from land and real estate in Karachi

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  04 March 2022

Loretta Lees
Affiliation:
University of Leicester
Hyun Bang Shin
Affiliation:
The London School of Economics and Political Science
Ernesto López-Morales
Affiliation:
Universidad de Chile
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Summary

Introduction

This chapter does not theorise, nor does it challenge, any theory of gentrification. It seeks to show how land-use changes and extracting value from real estate takes place in Karachi, a Global South mega-city. This process of extracting value pushes out poor communities from the land and homes of their ancestors and replaces them with richer and/or more politically powerful groups. These processes are very different from those in the Global North; nevertheless, my contention is that these are processes of gentrification. This chapter also shows how the concept of ‘gentrification’ and its vocabulary and neoliberal planning concepts are shaping academic training and public consciousness regarding heritage and conservation in Pakistan, and how attempts to take over Karachi's beaches (which are extensively used by its working and lower-middle classes) for high-income clubs, condominiums and five-star hotels and marinas have been made in the recent past. It is important to note that this development is taking place in areas located in the Defence Housing Authority (DHA) (a military-controlled housing colony) and those areas that come under the jurisdiction of the Karachi Port Trust (KPT) (a federal government agency, controlled for all practical purposes by the Pakistan Navy).

To understand what this means requires an understanding of land ownership and control patterns in the city. The City District Government Karachi (CDGK) directly controls 30.9% of land in the city. Indirectly, it also controls land allocated to civilian cooperative housing societies. This land amounts to only 1.9% of the total land mass of the Karachi district. Federal agencies – such as Railways, KPT, Port Qasim and the Federal Board of Revenue (BoR) – control 4.7%, the DHA 5% and the military cantonments 2.1%. The rest of the 56% is controlled by various agencies of the provincial government and by the national parks (20.7%). All the federal agencies (which include the military cantonments and the DHA) have their own development programmes, building by-laws and zoning regulations, while the city government has its own plans and regulatory institutions. There is no coordination between these different agencies for planning purposes except for overcoming issues related to utilities.

Type
Chapter
Information
Global Gentrifications
Uneven Development and Displacement
, pp. 181 - 198
Publisher: Bristol University Press
Print publication year: 2015

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