Conflict and Resilience in an Urban Squatter Settlement in Dili, East Timor
journal contribution
posted on 2024-11-02, 12:14 authored by James ScambarySince the end of the Indonesian occupation in 1999, East Timor's capital Dili has experienced a continuous rural-urban influx. This urban population growth has been concentrated in clusters of crowded and socially fragmented new squatter settlements, posing profound challenges for informal social control and community cohesion. Such neighbourhoods have continued to suffer from endemic communal tensions and gang violence. Using a case study of an urban squatter settlement in Dili, this paper makes two arguments. First, it is argued that, to engage with these communities and address conflict within them, it is imperative to understand the intricate and dynamic linkages between rural-urban migration, urban settlement patterns and communal violence. Secondly, it is argued here that the profuse variety of non-state groups inhabiting such settlements should be viewed from the context of the migrant experience, as unique forms of community resilience to this challenging environment. © 2012 Urban Studies Journal Limited.
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Urban StudiesVolume
50Issue
10Start page
1935End page
1950Total pages
16Publisher
SagePlace published
United KingdomLanguage
EnglishCopyright
© 2012 Urban Studies Journal LimitedFormer Identifier
2006098836Esploro creation date
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2020-05-12Usage metrics
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