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Electricity Supply in Khartoum: the planned, the delivered, the experienced

As the first step in rethinking infrastructure configurations and their alternatives, this thesis aims at looking into the existing policy framework that governs electricity supply in Khartoum, its implementation and how it's experienced by Khartoum's residents. By zooming into one locality in Khart...

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Main Author: Hassan, Basheir Hassan Razaz
Other Authors: Selmeczi, Anna
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Department of Environmental and Geographical Science 2022
Subjects:
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access_status_str Open Access
author Hassan, Basheir Hassan Razaz
author2 Selmeczi, Anna
author_browse Hassan, Basheir Hassan Razaz
Selmeczi, Anna
author_facet Selmeczi, Anna
Hassan, Basheir Hassan Razaz
author_sort Hassan, Basheir Hassan Razaz
collection Thesis
description As the first step in rethinking infrastructure configurations and their alternatives, this thesis aims at looking into the existing policy framework that governs electricity supply in Khartoum, its implementation and how it's experienced by Khartoum's residents. By zooming into one locality in Khartoum, the “Eastern Nile Locality”, the research has attempted to analyse the ways with which the limited electricity infrastructure is planned and allocated through its translation into policy frameworks in neighbouring areas falling under different zoning classification that correspond to their residents' income brackets. Review of the policy framework was conducted firstly, using a mix of desktop research and interviews with officials from the relevant institutions, investigating the key guidelines that govern electricity distribution across the various residential zones in terms of no/access to the grid, tariff regimes, contractual arrangements, alternative configurations and so on. The second part of the research was using ethnographic research methodologies to examine users' experience of electricity supply in its material and non-material dimensions. The studied cases revealed three main user categories; firstly, those grid-connected via the standard producers set by the Electricity Distribution Company. The second are those gridconnected via emerging models that could be classified as micro-financed co-production gridconnection. The third are those who remain off-grid and follow alternative routes. These varying regimes of service delivery are experienced by Khartoum residents on multiple levels, the most significant of which are firstly linked to users' experience of electricity as an unrivalled energy form that could be converted into a multiplicity of other forms, or its functional dimension as a modern technology that dis/enables greater space-time manipulation. Secondly, its more symbolic or representational aspects and their translation into social codes that define modern citizens and modernized states. Lastly, users' experience has pointed to the close link that the users make between electricity and the different relations that they form in their endeavors to access power services as in the different set of financial, legal, institutional and social relations and their implications in shaping subjectivities and articulating political positions.
format Thesis
id oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/35802
institution University of Cape Town (South Africa)
language eng
last_indexed 2026-06-10T12:48:36.781Z
license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2022
publishDateRange 2022
publishDateSort 2022
publisher Department of Environmental and Geographical Science
publisherStr Department of Environmental and Geographical Science
record_format dspace
source_str UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/35802 Electricity Supply in Khartoum: the planned, the delivered, the experienced Hassan, Basheir Hassan Razaz Selmeczi, Anna Southern Urbanism As the first step in rethinking infrastructure configurations and their alternatives, this thesis aims at looking into the existing policy framework that governs electricity supply in Khartoum, its implementation and how it's experienced by Khartoum's residents. By zooming into one locality in Khartoum, the “Eastern Nile Locality”, the research has attempted to analyse the ways with which the limited electricity infrastructure is planned and allocated through its translation into policy frameworks in neighbouring areas falling under different zoning classification that correspond to their residents' income brackets. Review of the policy framework was conducted firstly, using a mix of desktop research and interviews with officials from the relevant institutions, investigating the key guidelines that govern electricity distribution across the various residential zones in terms of no/access to the grid, tariff regimes, contractual arrangements, alternative configurations and so on. The second part of the research was using ethnographic research methodologies to examine users' experience of electricity supply in its material and non-material dimensions. The studied cases revealed three main user categories; firstly, those grid-connected via the standard producers set by the Electricity Distribution Company. The second are those gridconnected via emerging models that could be classified as micro-financed co-production gridconnection. The third are those who remain off-grid and follow alternative routes. These varying regimes of service delivery are experienced by Khartoum residents on multiple levels, the most significant of which are firstly linked to users' experience of electricity as an unrivalled energy form that could be converted into a multiplicity of other forms, or its functional dimension as a modern technology that dis/enables greater space-time manipulation. Secondly, its more symbolic or representational aspects and their translation into social codes that define modern citizens and modernized states. Lastly, users' experience has pointed to the close link that the users make between electricity and the different relations that they form in their endeavors to access power services as in the different set of financial, legal, institutional and social relations and their implications in shaping subjectivities and articulating political positions. 2022-02-22T04:06:59Z 2022-02-22T04:06:59Z 2021 2022-02-16T06:03:46Z Master Thesis Masters MPhil http://hdl.handle.net/11427/35802 eng application/pdf Department of Environmental and Geographical Science Faculty of Science
spellingShingle Southern Urbanism
Hassan, Basheir Hassan Razaz
Electricity Supply in Khartoum: the planned, the delivered, the experienced
thesis_degree_str Master's
title Electricity Supply in Khartoum: the planned, the delivered, the experienced
title_full Electricity Supply in Khartoum: the planned, the delivered, the experienced
title_fullStr Electricity Supply in Khartoum: the planned, the delivered, the experienced
title_full_unstemmed Electricity Supply in Khartoum: the planned, the delivered, the experienced
title_short Electricity Supply in Khartoum: the planned, the delivered, the experienced
title_sort electricity supply in khartoum the planned the delivered the experienced
topic Southern Urbanism
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/35802
work_keys_str_mv AT hassanbasheirhassanrazaz electricitysupplyinkhartoumtheplannedthedeliveredtheexperienced