Lagos temporalities: Negotiating urban mobilities in an age of mobile telephony
Co-hosted with the International Migration Institute

Lagos is known for the speed of its vibrant business and trade sector, one of the largest economies in Africa and a magnate for continued migration from within Nigeria and beyond. In this fast-moving city the diffusion and ubiquity of mobile telephony could be portrayed as an accelerator for equitable development, yet sharp inequalities persist.

In this presentation, I trace how these technologies facilitate communication and information flows and shift temporalities. These time-space conjunctures abound with contradictions exemplified in a grid-locked highway traversed simultaneously by luxury car owners and the masses hustling for a living in a challenging environment. The ubiquity of the mobile phone reveals ‘new’ ways of enacting agency in the quest for social and spatial mobility. The right to the city is encapsulated within a mantra of ‘self-help’ straddling diverse contemporary realities and future imaginaries.

I draw on ethnographic fieldwork to trace the complexity of these dynamics firstly, through the life story of Mariama, a 24-year-old woman living, working and studying in Lagos. Secondly through social mobilisation efforts to empower precarious slum communities and combat forced evictions. I argue that while we can trace the use of mobile telephony as disrupting and reinforcing power registers that mark boundaries of social difference, much remains in flux within this contested urban landscape.
Date: 9 February 2017, 17:00 (Thursday, 4th week, Hilary 2017)
Venue: St Antony's College, 62 Woodstock Road OX2 6JF
Venue Details: Pavilion Room
Speaker: Naluwembe Binaisa (University College London)
Organising department: Centre for African Studies
Organiser contact email address: african.studies@africa.ox.ac.uk
Part of: African Studies Seminar Series
Topics:
Booking required?: Not required
Cost: Free
Audience: Public
Editors: Jenny Peebles, Millie Oates