Planet of Slums
Planet of Slums
Planet of Slums
urban-geography.org.uk
Planet of Slums. By Mike Davis. London and New York: Verso, 2006. 228
pages. 15.99 (Hardback)
It is now generally accepted that we have entered a new geological epoch the
Anthropocence in which human beings have become a geological force of
climate change (Chakrabarty forthcoming 2009). This superb book by Mike Davis
tells the story of a major part of this epochal transition urbanisation
concentrated in slums (1). Consistent with monumental challenges in the
Anthropocence, the sustainability of these gigantic concentrations of poverty is
extremely doubtful (5). Thus, as readers of Planet of Slums might guess from the
cover, this book is a horrifying yet wholly engrossing read. Davis states in the
epilogue that the future of human solidarity depends upon the militant refusal of
the new urban poor to accept their terminal marginality within global capitalism
(202). In other words, the urban poor, an increasing percentage of the global
human population, are on a path that will place them at the forefront of
decisions about how human life will evolve. Without human solidarity and faced
instead with a Mad Max scenario of continual warfare, the challenges of the
Anthropocence seem unlikely to be met. This poses dire consequences: in Val
Plumwoods (2007: 1) words, We will go onwards in a different mode of
humanity, or not at all. I have jumped to the end of the Planet of Slums in this
review because, as a scholar interested in imagining possibilities for a different
world, it is with the question of human solidarity that I would have liked the book
to start. For Davis, however, this is a different project (201).
From the first to the last page, Planet of Slums is packed full of fascinating
statistics and stories. As I read the book (at home), I felt the need to constantly
interrupt my partner with yet another amazing statistic, such as the comment at
the beginning of the book that London in 1910 was seven times larger than it
had been in 1800, but Dhaka, Kinshasa, and Lagos today are each approximately
forty times larger than they were in 1950 (2, original emphasis). Such
overwhelming information makes Daviss portrayal of slums very convincing.
Planet of Slums is expansive in scope, taking the reader on a global journey and
across many different aspects of slums. The book begins with a discussion of
urbanisation and the nature of slum dwelling (chapters 1 and 2). Approaching
housing as a verb, Davis considers the diversity of housing across different
lives as people negotiate the need to be close to work, for security and other
Gerda Roelvink
The Australian National University
References
Appadurai, A. 2002. Deep Democracy: Urban Governmentality and the Horizon of
Politics, Public Culture 14(1), 21-47.
MacKenzie, D., Muniesa, F. and Siu, L. 2007. Do Economists Make Markets: On
the Performativity of Economics, Princeton University Press, Princeton and
Oxford.
Chakrabarty. D. Forthcoming 2009. The Climate of History: Four Theses, Critical
Inquiry 36 (Winter).