Skip to main navigation Skip to search Skip to main content

A critical organizational history of city margins in the Global South

  • Ulf Volker Thoene (Correspondent Author)
  • , Cesar Lacerda (First Author)
  • , Ana Silvia Rocha Ipiranga (Second Author)

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

3 Scopus citations

Abstract

Purpose: The city of Fortaleza, capital of the state of Ceará in the north-east of Brazil, presents a paradox as a present-day tourist destination, while also marked by features and processes characteristic of cities in the Global South, such as high levels of social inequality with fragmented urban margins and vulnerabilities. This research problematizes the idea of “historical ruins” proposed by Walter Benjamin as a viable way to understand how the organization process of today's city margins can be “denaturalized” by the past. The objective of this research is to assess how the urban margins of the city were organized as a history of resistance. Design/methodology/approach: In theoretical terms, this research links critical urban studies with critical approaches to organizational history (COH) based on Walter Benjamin's philosophical concepts of “ruins” and “progress”. The historical and archival methodology, consisting of 193 documents, suggests the existence of a philosophical–historical nexus that helps explain the spatial fragmentation of the city, and especially the urban margins in the western region of Fortaleza. Findings: The Benjaminian notion of “historical ruins” has been exemplified by the Brazilian government practices confining migrants fleeing drought in internment camps on the margins of the city of Fortaleza in three waves beginning in 1877, 1915 and 1932 respectively. The effects of such confinement policies put into practice in the name of “progress” influenced the organization of large urban spaces on the city's margins, whereas on the other hand, the analyses advanced in this research reflect on alternatives to re-frame the history of the organization of the margins of Fortaleza through a set of practices of resistance. Originality/value: Based on the concept of “denaturalization”, and through re-activation of the memory of a circumstantial past, the gaze of the “ruins”, as represented by the belief in “progress” addressed in official reports of government confinement policies, spaces of resistance have emerged where new possibilities for the future of the city can be imagined.

Translated title of the contributionA critical organizational history of city margins in the Global South
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)22-45
Number of pages24
JournalQualitative Research in Organizations and Management
Volume18
Issue number1
DOIs
StatePublished - 22 Mar 2023

Strategic Focuses

  • Cultura de Paz, Ciudadanía y Familia UniSabana ​(Pacificus)

Article Classification

  • Full research article

Indexación Internacional (Artículo)

  • ISI Y SCOPUS

Scopus-Q Quartil

  • Q1

ISI- Q Quartil

  • Sin factor de impacto

Categoría Publindex

  • A2

Fingerprint

Dive into the research topics of 'A critical organizational history of city margins in the Global South'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.

Cite this