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Carmel Rawhani

Abstract

South Africa’s history of purposefully segregated public space as a stage on which the anti-cohesion ideals of various colonial governments played out is well known. What is less known is the rich history of public space resistance which accompanies this, particularly that of the People’s Parks. These collectively driven public places which emerged as pop-ups in public space captured the imagination of communities seeking to activate new norms departing from state-enforced segregation. Reading current public space through the lens of the People’s Parks thus presents an opportunity to uncover and better understand the existence and impact of fleeting places in public space, with lasting impacts in terms of building engaging communities. Drawing on immersive participant observation in Johannesburg’s Killarney Park, this paper focuses on a community of local residents and their dogs. Brought together first by their pets but later by strong in-group social bonds, this group demonstrates the potential for communities to grow from and in public space entirely organically, not reliant on infrastructure or physical planning and design interventions. Instead, an often invisible and seemingly intangible place is created with very real dimensions for those who co-create it once a day in coming together. This paper explores the space that is Killarney Park, and the place that is the dog walkers’ circle, in an effort to better understand these dynamics and suggest possibilities for further research on public space in Africa.


 

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How to Cite
Rawhani, C. (2022) “Fleeting Public Place and Lasting Communities: Dog Walking in Johannesburg’s Killarney Park”, The Journal of Public Space, 7(1), pp. 297–310. doi: 10.32891/jps.v7i1.1508.
Section
Academic
Author Biography

Carmel Rawhani, Wits-TUB-UNILAG Urban Lab

Carmel Rawhani is a development specialist and urban generalist born in Johannesburg and raised in Haifa. Growing up in what some call Israel as the daughter of a Palestinian-Egyptian mother and an Iranian father, the vital importance of public space in fractured societies has always fascinated her. She has a Bachelor’s degree in Political Science and Arabic Language and Literature from the University of Cape Town, where she later received an Honor’s degree in International Relations. After a brief stint in New York where she completed an internship as research assistant to UN representatives, she earned her Master of Management in Public Policy at the Wits School of Governance, leading to a career in policy studies and analysis which in turn took her to the South African Institute of International Relations. This immersion in international research and development cooperation diplomacy allowed her to represent South African civil society and gender groups at the AU, as well as conduct fieldwork and research across central and southern Africa. Carmel turned her focus, first from the international level, to the national, and finally to the sub-national: the city. A scholarship from the Life in the City program allowed her to return to her alma mater at Wits and complete a PhD in Philosophy focusing on public spaces in Johannesburg and the unrealized aspiration for social cohesion in the public realm. Having completed postdoctoral research at the Wits-TUB-UNILAG Urban Lab, working between Johannesburg and Berlin, Carmel currently manages the Finance and Violence Prevention portfolios at KfW Development Bank’s South Africa office. Her interests are at the meeting point of cities, public space, social cohesion, social norms, and development cooperation, and she is currently co-editing a book which seeks to dispel the powerful normative myths that dominate the globalized development discourse. Still fascinated with the complexity of deeply divided cities such as Johannesburg, Haifa, and many others like them, Carmel continues to study and write about the spaces and places where she was born and raised.

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