Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://hdl.handle.net/10321/4365
Title: Urban transformation at a local level? The case of Durban's 100 resilient cities campaign
Authors: Feltes, Tilmann Felix 
Keywords: Urban transformation;Urban resilience;Sustainable Development Goal (SDG)
Issue Date: Nov-2020
Abstract: 
This thesis aims to explore the interdependencies between the concepts of urban transformation and
urban resilience, enriched by an interrogation of the practical use of these concepts at a local level. It
discusses the problems in finding conceptual clarity and in implementing these concepts in the city
of Durban. Transformative and resilient urban management is viewed as the key driver for sustainable
solutions to urbanisation challenges such as socio-economic pressures and environmental degradation. The important role cities play in this process has recently been highlighted by the United Nations’ Sustainable Development Goal (SDG) No. 11, which is devoted to making cities “inclusive,
safe, resilient and sustainable”. The concepts of urban transformation and urban resilience are increasingly used in academic literature as well by practitioners, but there is little academic literature
available about the interrelation and interdependency of these two new concepts. This research explores what exactly is meant by the “new paradigm” of urban transformation and what role the concept of urban resilience plays within it. To achieve this aim, a theoretical research into the current
application of the two concepts is being conducted and enriched by a practical interrogation of the
use of the two concepts at a local level. Here, the city of Durban and its 100 Resilient Cities project
was selected as an African city to explore and interrogate the municipality’s aim to activate a process
of urban transformation with this project. The research includes primarily an intensive literature-review, a document analysis of current approaches and of given path-dependencies, and new concepts
in the urban development debate. These findings are interrogated against the outline and the implementation of the 100 Resilient Cities campaign in Durban. After a detailed documentation of the
implementation of the project, additional interviews conducted with experts in the field contribute to
the findings and analysis of the data. The research recommends new governance models for cities,
given their emerging political power. It shows that “resilient” approaches are needed for any urban
transformation process and identifies the benefits of city networks and international exchange in this
context. With its findings, the research aims to create new knowledge, for academia and practitioners
concurrently, by providing conceptual clarity about the interdependencies between the concept of
urban transformation and the concept of urban resilience, and its practical meaning within a concrete
project context in a very large city in South Africa. This knowledge feeds into the emerging and
currently developing academic literature and policy debates.
Description: 
Submitted in fulfillment of the requirements of the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in Management Sciences: Urban Futures Centre (UFC), Durban University of Technology, Durban, South Africa, 2020.
URI: https://hdl.handle.net/10321/4365
DOI: https://doi.org/10.51415/10321/4365
Appears in Collections:Theses and dissertations (Management Sciences)

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