Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-t7fkt Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-24T02:34:54.776Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Urbanisation by subtraction: the afterlife of camps in northern Uganda*

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  10 November 2014

Susan Reynolds Whyte*
Affiliation:
Oester Farimagsgade 5, DK 1353 Copenhagen, Denmark Department of Anthropology, University of Copenhagen
Sulayman Babiiha*
Affiliation:
Department of Development Studies, Gulu University, Uganda
Rebecca Mukyala*
Affiliation:
Department of Development Studies, Gulu University, Uganda
Lotte Meinert*
Affiliation:
Department of Culture and Society, Aarhus University, Denmark

Abstract

As peace returns to northern Uganda, a unique arithmetic of development is evident in the former Internally Displaced Persons camps. Small trading centres whose populations multiplied as they became camps now envision futures as Town Boards. Subtraction is necessary: the displaced people and the dead buried in the camps are being returned to their rural villages. Urban planners have produced meticulous drawings that envisage the division of land into plots for development. Donors are making additions in the form of new market buildings and water supplies. Yet this arithmetic must reckon with new problems as time passes. The article is based primarily on fieldwork in Awach, a former IDP camp now slated for status as a Town Board. In analysing material from interviews with landowners, ‘remainders’ who stayed behind after the camp closed, local leaders and officials, we emphasise the paradoxes, tensions and conflicts of this special path to development.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 2014 

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

Footnotes

*

The study took place under the Gulu Enhancement of Research Capacity project entitled ‘Changing Human Security: Recovery from Armed Conflict in Northern Uganda’ funded by the Danish Consultative Research Committee for Development Research, which we gratefully acknowledge. Permission was obtained from the Gulu University Institutional Review Committee and the Uganda National Council of Science and Technology. We were ably assisted by Okema David, Oketayot Dennis, Otika Shanon, Opio Martin, Adongo Alice, Sunday Pii Acholi and three Gulu University Masters students: Opio Washington, J.B. Okot and Oyet Kenneth. Thank you for translations, discussions and good company.

References

REFERENCES

Acholi Religious Leaders Peace Initiative (ARLPI). 2001. Let my People go: the forgotten plight of the people in the displaced camps in Acholi. Acholi Religious Leaders Peace Initiative Justice & Peace Commission of Gulu Archdiocese.Google Scholar
Atkinson, R. 2008. ‘Land issues in Acholi in the transition from war to peace’, The Examiner 4: 3–9, 1725.Google Scholar
Atkinson, R. 2010. The Roots of Ethnicity: the origins of the Acholi of Uganda, 2nd Edn. Kampala: Fountain Publishers.Google Scholar
Bjarnesen, J. 2013. ‘Diaspora at home? Wartime mobilities in the Burkina Faso-Côte d'Ivoire transnational space’. Ph.D. thesis, Department of Cultural Anthropology, Uppsala University.Google Scholar
Branch, A. 2011. Displacing Human Rights: war and intervention in northern Uganda. Oxford: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Branch, A. 2013. ‘Gulu in war … and peace? The town as camp in northern Uganda’, Urban Studies 50, 15: 3152–67.Google Scholar
Brookings Institution–University of Bern. 2007. When Displacement Ends: a framework for durable solutions. Washington, DC: Brookings Institution.Google Scholar
Cohen, D. & Odhiambo, A.. 1983. Burying SM: the politics of knowledge and the sociology of power in Africa. Portsmouth, NH: Heinemann and James Currey.Google Scholar
Dolan, C. 2009. Social Torture: the case of northern Uganda, 1986–2006. New York, NY: Berghahn Books.Google Scholar
Finnström, S. 2008. Living with Bad Surroundings: war, history and everyday moments in northern Uganda. Durham: Duke University Press.Google Scholar
Finnström, S. 2010. ‘An African hell of colonial imagination? The Lord's Resistance Army in Uganda, another story’, in Allen, T. & Vlassenroot, K., eds. The Lord's Resistance Army: myth and reality. London: Zed Books, 7489.Google Scholar
Folmann, B. 2012. ‘Motherhood, moralities and HIV: making lives in northern Uganda’. PhD thesis. Department of Culture and Society, Aarhus University.Google Scholar
Gelsdorf, K., Maxwell, D. & Mazurana, D.. 2012. Livelihoods, basic services and social protection in Northern Uganda and Karamoja. Working Paper 4. In Researching livelihoods and services affected by conflict. London: Overseas Development Institute.Google Scholar
Jahn, I. 2013. ‘‘Bones in the Wrong Soil’: reburials and belonging in post-conflict Acholiland, northern Uganda’. European Master in Migration and Intercultural Relations, University of Oldenburg.Google Scholar
Kaducu, F., Ovuga, E., Meinert, L., Whyte, S.R., Okumu, C.L. & Sodemann, M.. 2013. ‘Effects of conflict and displacement on education among rural population of Awach Demographic Surveillance System (DSS) site in northern Uganda’, ms.Google Scholar
Lubkemann, S. 2008. Culture in Chaos: an anthropology of the social condition in war. Chicago, IL: University of Chicago Press.Google Scholar
Mallett, R. 2010. ‘Transition, connection and uncertainty: IDPs in Kampala’, Forced Migration Review 34: 3435.Google Scholar
Mattingly, C. 1998. Healing Dramas and Clinical Plots: the narrative structure of experience. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Meinert, L. in press. ‘Tricky trust: distrust as a point of departure and trust as a social achievement in Uganda’, in Lisberg, S., Pedersen, E. & Dalsgaard, A.L., eds. Anthropology & Philosophy: dialogues on trust and hope. London: Berghahn.Google Scholar
Meinert, L. & Whyte, S.R.. 2013. ‘Creating the new times: reburials after war in northern Uganda’, in Pedersen, D. & Willerslev, R., eds. Taming Time, Timing Death: social technologies and rituals. Farnham: Ashgate, 175–93.Google Scholar
Meinert, L. & Schneidermann, N.. 2014. ‘Making a name: young musicians in Uganda working on the future’, in Dalsgaard, A.L., Frederiksen, M.D., Højlund, S. & Meinert, L., eds. Ethnographies of Youth and Temporality: time objectified. Philadelphia, PA: Temple University Press, 153–74.Google Scholar
Mergelsberg, B. 2012. ‘The displaced family: moral imaginations and social control in Pabbo, northern Uganda’, Journal of Eastern African Studies 6: 6480.Google Scholar
Muyinda, H. & Whyte, S.R.. 2011. ‘Displacement, mobility and poverty in northern Uganda’, in Ingstad, B. & Eide, A., eds. Disability and Poverty. Bristol: Policy Press, 119–36.Google Scholar
Nibbe, A.A. 2010. ‘The effects of a narrative: humanitarian aid and action in the northern Uganda conflict’. PhD thesis, Department of Anthropology, University of California Davis.Google Scholar
Refstie, H., Dolan, C. & Okello, M.C.. 2010. ‘Urban IDPs in Uganda: victims of institutional convenience’, Forced Migration Review 34: 32–3.Google Scholar
Refugee Law Project. 2012. ‘From Arid Zones into the Desert: The Uganda National IDP Policy implementation 2004–2012’, Working Paper 23. Kampala: Refugee Law Project.Google Scholar
Roberts, B., Ocaka, K.F., Browne, J., Oyok, T. & Sondorp, E.. 2008. ‘Factors associated with post-traumatic stress disorder and depression amongst internally displaced persons in northern Uganda’, BMC Psychiatry 8, 38. http://www.biomedcentral.com/1471-244X/8/38.Google Scholar
Shipton, P. 2009. Mortgaging the Ancestors: ideologies of attachment in Africa. New Haven, CT: Yale University Press.Google Scholar
Snowden, W. 2009. Land conflict mitigation project: vulnerable at risk from disputes over IPD camp land. Land Issues 2014: Acholi Religious Leaders Peace Initiative.Google Scholar
Uganda Bureau of Statistics (UBOS) and Macro International Inc. 2007. Uganda Demographic and Health Survey 2006. Calverton, MD: UBOS and Macro International Inc.Google Scholar
UNHCR. 2012. UNHCR wraps up one of world's biggest IDP operations in Uganda. http://www.unhcr.org/4f0718269.html.Google Scholar
Whyte, S.R. 2005. ‘Going home? Burial and belonging in the era of AIDS’, Africa 75, 2: 154–72.Google Scholar
Whyte, S.R., Babiiha, S., Mukyala, R. & Meinert, L.. 2013a. ‘Remaining internally displaced: missing links to human security in northern Uganda’, Journal of Refugee Studies 26, 2: 283301.Google Scholar
Whyte, S.R., Babiiha, S., Mukyala, R. & Meinert, L.. 2013b. ‘From encampment to emplotment: land matters in former IDP camps’, Journal of Peace and Security Studies. http://www.jpss.ug/.Google Scholar
Wilhelm-Solomon, M. 2011. ‘Displacing AIDS: therapeutic transitions in northern Uganda’. PhD thesis. Department of International Development, University of Oxford.Google Scholar