‘Housing’ as Christian social practice in African cities : centering the urban majority theologically
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Date
Authors
De Beer, Stephan F.
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
MDPI
Abstract
Decent, affordable housing and secure housing tenure remain elusive for Africa’s urban
majority. The urban majority is expected to live in self-help housing, reflected in the fact that 62% of
African urban dwellers live in urban informal settlements. The inability to access safe, decent, and
secure housing, and the reality that Africa’s urban majority is perpetually precarious, have a severe
impact on Africa’s urban households and the well-being of individuals, families, and neighborhoods.
This article articulates housing as a critical and urgent Christian social practice in African cities—an
extension of the church’s pastoral and missional concern. It considers housing both as a product and
a process: people need housing to live secure lives; yet, the process of housing is as critical as the
outcome. It then proposes housing, as a Christian social practice, being engaged in (i) supporting
precarious households; (ii) preventing homelessness; (iii) creating housing; (iv) supporting rightsbased land and housing movements; and (v) centering housing pastorally–liturgically. The article
grounds itself in Jean-Marc Ela’s insistence on God’s presence ‘in the hut of a mother whose granary
is empty’ and in Letty Russell’s ‘household of freedom’.
Description
Keywords
African urbanisation, Housing, Precarious households, Preventing homelessness, Rights-based land, Housing movements, SDG-11: Sustainable cities and communities
Sustainable Development Goals
SDG-11:Sustainable cities and communities
Citation
De Beer, Stephan. 2023. ‘Housing’ as Christian Social Practice
in African Cities: Centering the Urban Majority Theologically.
Religions 14: 1009. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel14081009.