1st Edition

Planning in Contemporary Africa The State, Town Planning and Society in Cameroon

By Ambe J. Njoh Copyright 2003

    Why do authorities in post-colonial African states continue to employ European or Western planning models? What are the implications for different societal groups of adopting such models? Several decades following independence, this outstanding volume provides in-depth empirical research to uncover the answers to such questions. The book focuses in particular on Cameroon, the only African country to have been colonized by three different European powers: Germany, Britain and France. It discusses the nature of the state in peripheral capitalist countries and sets current planning and land use policies in their historical, colonial and post-colonial contexts. The author then proceeds to examine key planning issues such as housing, land ownership, sustainable development, environmental and waste management, transportation, infrastructure and gender. In addition to analyzing the impact of colonialism and imperialism on the built environment in Cameroon in particular and sub-Saharan Africa in general, the book also addresses global issues about urbanism and will be particularly relevant to those interested in planning, regional studies and development, and development geography.

    Contents: Introduction and overview; Theories of the state and the state in Cameroon; Institutional framework for planning; Colonial roots of land use and physical planning; Urban land use and control measures; Housing and housing policy; Local government administration, sanitation and waste management; Transportation infrastructure and policy; Street and property identification; Urban planning and women; References; Index.

    Biography

    Ambe J. Njoh

    'The study provides a lot of interesting and important material on planning in Cameroon, which is put into a wider context...The strength...is certainly the empirical grounding of the argumentation...the study is of high relevance for those working on Western Africa.' Quarterly Journal of International Agriculture '...the author is to be congratulated in...bringing new empirical material to a wider audience.' International Planning Studies