Housing, Displacement, and the Elderly: Intersectional Spatial Narratives from Tareek al-Jdeede, Beirut

Housing, Displacement, and the Elderly: Intersectional Spatial Narratives from Tareek al-Jdeede, Beirut

[This article is drawn from a paper presented by the author at the Vulnerability, Infrastructure, and Displacement Symposium held at University College London on 12-13 June 2019, as part of the panel on “Vulnerability and the (Built) Environment.” Click herehere, and here for other articles drawn from the same panel.]

The current habitability crisis, and the failure of progressive policies to think of ways that cities can adapt to different forms of displacement and resist the interrelated practices of expulsion, extraction, and externalization, are clear to anyone engaging with urban spatial practices. Displacement is a key characteristic of the urban present, requiring interrogations across different geographies, and with different methodological approaches. This article explores some of these dynamics by drawing on an ongoing research collaboration between Public Works Studio and The Bartlett Development Planning Unit (DPU) as part of the RELIEF Centre Project focusing on prosperity in Lebanon in the context of mass displacement. Therein, we study the effects of real estate policy, and the financialization of housing markets, which have resulted in the eviction and displacement of the most vulnerable social groups in Beirut, and have turned the capital city into an exclusive, unjust, and vulnerable place.

Methodologically, the research develops housing narratives and spatial stories that, situated within larger research, serve as the crossing point between the impact of market-driven urban development on housing rights in Lebanon, and the strategies, opportunities, expectations, and disappointments of elderly women in mitigating evictions, displacement, and the social security of their families. The housing stories and diagrams were originally published by The Housing Monitor, an interactive online platform for consolidating research, building advocacy, and proposing alternatives to advance the right to housing in Lebanon.

Dwelling in Tareek al-Jdeede

Although today’s urban transformations in Tareek al-Jdeede may seem similar to those in most of Beirut’s neighborhoods, the history and socio-spatial make-up of each neighborhood determines a particular set of interactions, strategies of resilience, housing typologies, and vulnerabilities. By 2004, Mazraa—the larger administrative zone containing the neighborhood of Tareek al-Jdeede—contained around thirty percent of Beirut’s tenants living under the old rent law. These tenants—whose contracts were established prior to 1992—are today aged forty-five and above, and landlords have been evicting them or threatening them with eviction at an increasing rate (Public Works Studio, 2015–2017)[1]. Among these, the elderly (and the retired) carry as a social group a set of particularities that places them at odds with state housing policies that rely primarily on the provision of subsidized homeownership loans. They also face the threat of displacement in the absence of social housing programs and with limited social-security benefits. Family connections protect the elderly in some neighborhoods, and the latter attract charity organizations that are often affiliated with sectarian institutions. When it all fails, displacement has severe impacts on their ways of life and on their physical and mental well-being. While relocation generates a number of possible scenarios, we focus on two cases of relocation after eviction: relocation within the neighborhood, and relocation to a distant suburb. Through these case studies, we set out to investigate the ways in which urban processes and property frameworks impact the displacement, and more generally, the housing conditions, of vulnerable social groups, and the urban and architectural forms that housing-related displacement generates.

Um Yumna and Um Hassan Graphic Stories

Um Yumna was fourteen years old when she moved from Beqaa to live in Beirut. She had married a young Berjaoui man who worked in the city, and they settled in one of the small homes of Ras al-Nabaa in the mid-fifties. A year or two later, a series of earthquakes shook the country, and Um Yumna’s house in Ras al-Nabaa fell apart. In 1957, the young family moved. At the time, Um Yumna did not intend to spend the next fifty-five years of her life in that little three-room house atop Zreik Hill in Tareek al-Jdeede. In 2012, the owner made a development agreement with an investor to demolish the three-story building and evicted Um Yumna. She then moved to Barja, a town located thirty-five kilometers south of Beirut. This severely ruptured her social relations and daily activities, as they had been intricately rooted in the spaces surrounding her.

   

In 1982, Um Hassan, aged eighteen, moved from the neighborhood of Noueiri to Tareek al-Jdeede with her two children. Originally from the south of Lebanon, she married a relative of hers who resided in Beirut. Today, Um Hassan is in her late fifties, and continues to live in the same quarter of Tareek al-Jdeede, but in a different house, after her landlord evicted her from her home of thirty-four years in 2016. A real estate company bought the building in 2011, and Um Hassan agreed to leave. She used the compensation money—in addition to other resources including a loan from a religious institution—to buy the adjacent house. By doing so, she bought into a shared property, which is by itself another form of vulnerability. Between her two dwellings lies a small courtyard where one can find her every afternoon, having coffee and a cigarette. After having lived as an old-rent tenant for decades, buying into a shared property was her only means of resisting displacement.

Um Hassan’s courtyard (1982)

 

Um Hassan’s courtyard (2019)

The similarities and differences between these two cases allow us to draw a comparative analysis. By looking at the impact of both the process and destination of displacement on evicted elderly and their practices, we can approach the following questions: What means do the elderly have to resist displacement and what role do socio-spatial networks play in this dynamic, especially in the case of Tareek al-Jdeede? Does relocation within the same neighborhood mitigate the negative impacts of eviction on the elderly, and if so, how? How do evictions, displacements, and spatial typologies impact the socio-spatial practices of the elderly, their mobility, and their relation to the neighborhood?

Reflections from the Comparative Analysis

Despite renting for most of their lives, the perception of property ownership as the primary means of achieving socio-economic and housing security prompted both women to seek homeownership after their evictions. They did this by mobilizing a complex web of resources; the capital required to attain homeownership was tightly enmeshed in the relocation options available for these elderly women, and provisions for their children were deciding factors in their decision-making processes.

Other forms of vulnerability linked to the production of housing in Lebanon manifest in the making of the suburbs. Apart from poor urban planning practices, resulting in environmental and spatial injustices, the arrival of the displaced to these outlying towns sheds light on psychological violence. The elderly endure the crumbling of social networks and support systems, the difficulty of fostering new ones, the reduction of mobility and autonomy, the deterioration of their health, the loss of spatial references, and consequently, the loss of a sense of place and belonging. Concurrently, it was intriguing to observe how the urban morphology—spatial typology or density—can impact the building of social ties. Um Yumna was unable to adapt to her new surroundings in the suburbanizing town of Barja. Sparse urbanization and lack of accessible mobilities led to feelings of alienation, which pushed her to seek a different spatiality for socialization: the grocery store by the side of the road. Um Hassan’s husband echoed this story: he opened a shop in the city, primarily as a means to socialize after developers emptied the neighborhood of its older inhabitants.Nonetheless, the sense of security that homeownership might bring is accompanied by multiple forms of precarity and vulnerabilities. There are no affordable options to buy in the Beirut, where new unaffordable high-rise buildings are replacing the older fabric. As such, the aspiring middle class has mainly sought homeownership in nearby suburbanizing areas, and usually chooses these areas in conformity to sectarian affiliations or origins. In contrast, the working class access substandard housing in the city, usually in areas built before 1992 and threatened by sudden changes brought on by real estate investment or planning implementations. In the meantime, the gap between housing conditions is widening in the city. This takes a heavier toll when developers use the same evicted units to exploit politically and/or economically vulnerable groups, particularly refugees and their families. Developers grant these groups temporary housing in order to generate profit, while retaining the power to evict them spontaneously in order to proceed with building demolition.

The shop as a social interface for the elderly

Through this study, we situate urban evictions beyond the confines of the city, shedding light on an emerging territorial dynamic between inner-city neighborhoods undergoing waves of evictions and radical spatial changes, and the suburbanizing towns that are hosting displaced households. We revisit the myth of homeownership as a secure form of housing in its relation to poor urban planning practices and precarious ownership frameworks. These cases both present narratives that portray housing in the city as an access point to vital economic resources, in a context where developers are commodifying and financializing the urban space in practice and discourse. They also highlight the importance of socio-spatial networks for the elderly—and the urban and suburban processes that threaten them—whereby the understanding of home takes on a larger, more social dimension than that of the physical domestic space.

Urban density as economic resource: Um Hassan’s son and his service business

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[1] Public Works Studio, 2015-2017, Mapping Beirut Through its Tenants’ Stories.

[This article was originally published by Jadaliyya on 19 December, 2019.]

Response to Papers of Panel on “Vulnerability and the (Built) Environment”

Response to Papers of Panel on “Vulnerability and the (Built) Environment”

[This article is drawn from a discussion of three papers presented the Vulnerability, Infrastructure, and Displacement Symposium (2019), as part of the panel on “Vulnerability and the (Built) Environment.” Click herehere, and here for the articles based on papers presented at the same panel.]

The question around which this panel pivots is how to constitute refugee vulnerability in ways that take account of the social links, economic disparities, and political relations that form the context of refugee life in the Global South more broadly and in Lebanon more specifically.  I want to use the framework offered by Hanna Baumann to think through manifestations of infrastructural vulnerabilities in two neighbourhoods in Beirut where I myself used to live.

Hanna offers a very thoughtful re-formulation of vulnerability in ways that can help us see that the reduction of the concept to individualised need, or even categorical deprivations necessitating aid, does not allow us to address the structural conditions that shape inequality, deprivation, and vulnerability.

Looking through this lens, we see Samar Kanafani and Nadine Bekdache’s presentations as astute analyses of the broader conditions under which both refugees and elderly Lebanese citizens live precariously, and suffer inferior and insecure housing conditions. In this response, I show the spatial/historical continuities of the condition of vulnerability within Lebanon—between refugees, migrant workers, and impoverished citizens—and highlight a number of common themes that emerge in the three papers.

First and foremost, what distinguishes Lebanon from most other states in the Middle East and beyond is that long before the concept of “neoliberalism” became a mainstay of political economy analyses, the Lebanese state displayed neoliberal characteristics. It was a state at the service of the bourgeoisie, guaranteeing free movement and the free flow of capital across the Syrian-Lebanese border, and a more restricted conduit for the flow of labour across the same border. The Lebanese state’s support for the bourgeoisie and the orientation of its resources toward entrepreneurs is a further characteristic of neoliberalism. Lebanon’s neoliberal characteristics since its inception have meant that there have always been workers, migrants, and refugees who have had neither the protection of citizenship nor ownership of property.

A second element seemed particularly salient to me: the discussion of how Syrian workers/migrants squatted in precarious and often derelict ruins. When I first lived in Lebanon more than twenty years ago, what really struck me was that it was difficult to tell whether buildings were ruins or in the process of being built. What also struck me was that in so much of Beirut, and particularly in Ras Beirut, so many of the Syrian workers that were helping rebuild post-war Beirut actually lived on-site, and used tarpaulin and mudbrick to turn these ruins/half-built habitations into places they could inhabit until their employers no longer allowed them to do so.

In some ways, this provides a segue into Nadine’s research. She shows us how these processes of capital accumulation constructed around property and housing do two things simultaneously: they are processes of dispossessing significant parts of the population and they consolidate regimes of private ownership. Sometimes, they consolidate privatisation of public spaces; at other times they provide new property regimes which create property out of thin air (i.e., building permits which allow the construction of additional floors on top of pre-existing buildings).It seems to me that this same precarity is a condition of life in Beirut today, where landowners maintain marginal spaces of squatting and derelict housing in reserve, in ways that guarantee the accumulation of capital. If, in the past, such spaces had served to accommodate a disciplined and deportable labour force, today construction workers essentially hold a building in reserve until it can become the object of property speculation. What distinguishes the displaced from the phalanxes of migrants and refugees is their routine encounter with experts and vulnerable groups, and the constant exposure to an outside gaze.

That developers use property deeds to demarcate ownership—and with it belonging and personhood—is significant in some places. Think of, for comparison, Palestinians fighting the invasion of their homes by Israeli settlers. However, it is important to note that the property deeds can also be a means of upward redistribution of wealth or means of consolidating systems of capitalist ownership, accumulation, and development. This begins with John Locke, who sees in property ownership alone a fundamental and necessary condition of civilization. It continues in Hernando De Soto, whose solution to radical inequality and poverty in informal settlements in Latin America is the provision of land deeds (and presumably privatisation of state lands) to the poor.

Today, these particular views promote a technical solution to questions of reconstruction; they enshrine private property ownership as a natural or naturalized process. What they ignore is the very things that Samar’s and Nadine’s papers have highlighted: the unravelling of social relations, the erosion of the kind of convivial human relations that are crucial to survival in a neoliberal city, the hardening of communitarian divides, and wildly uneven urban planning approaches in two neighbourhoods separated by a road or a cemetery. This characterizes, for example, Tareek al-Jdeede. This also results in the strengthening of the power of sectarian institutions, which act as nodes of redistribution of social welfare.

I think what Samar’s and Nadine’s papers show in generous and textured ethnographic detail, and which Hanna exhorts us to understand is that the forms of vulnerability generated here are not individual. They are not even categorical, or “inherent to certain groups” as Hanna writes, whether these groups are elderly women without social security or Syrian migrant squatters. Rather, on the one hand, these vulnerabilities shine a light on longer-standing forms of structural injustice, and on the other hand, on the aggressive neoliberal solutions offered to these inequalities and injustices, including the pernicious discourse of resilience which Hanna spoke about.

[This article was originally published by Jadaliyya on 19 December, 2020.]

Residues of Ras Beirut: Derelict Spaces, Delicate Arrangements, and the Precarity of Migrant Housing

Residues of Ras Beirut: Derelict Spaces, Delicate Arrangements, and the Precarity of Migrant Housing

[This article is drawn from a paper presented by the author at the Vulnerability, Infrastructure, and Displacement Symposium (2019), as part of the panel on “Vulnerability and the (Built) Environment.” Click herehere, and here for other articles drawn from the same panel.]

This article explores the ways migrants who are in precarious conditions access housing and carve out a life in the derelict spaces of Ras Beirut, a neighborhood of the capital reputed for class and ethnic diversity in a country that is steeply stratified along socio-economic. While gradually gentrifying, a patchy property-led real estate market has left small pockets of old derelict buildings and run-down houses standing between newly constructed or renovated buildings aimed for privileged users. This paper explores how Syrian sponsored workers and refugees as well as Asian migrant domestic workers, make necessary infrastructural and spatial arrangements to inhabit otherwise uninhabitable houses or re-inhabit previously vacant ones. These delicate arrangements are the social networks of reciprocity that enable migrant housing, and dependency on the patronage and approval of owners, employers, and legal sponsors (kafeel) are indispensable for their precarious access and continued housing in Ras Beirut.

I argue that the accommodation of these migrants within make-shift domestic setups and without rental contracts, aligns well with landowners’ intentions to evict any remaining occupants from their derelict buildings to eventually regenerate their properties, having purposefully neglected to repair them to this end, but seeing an interim opportunity to benefit from and speculate on the property value. Assigning inhumane service areas and residual spaces to migrant workers who live in their sponsoring employers’ homes, is reproduced at the scale of the urban landscape by the relegation of migrants to the residual spaces, the only type of shelter they can access in this prohibitively expensive area. While delicate spatial and social arrangements of dwelling enable migrants to maintain housing under these circumstances, social stigmas continuously marginalize and threaten place in the neighborhood.

Delicate Spatial Arrangements as Enabling Housing in Urban Residues

Amer,[i] from rural Syria began living in Ras Beirut in 2014, first as foreman on a construction site, then as concierge for the high-end residential building when it was completed, earning five hundred dollars a month. But the building owners who are also his legal sponsors have not allowed his wife and children to live with him in the one-room studio they provided him on the ground floor. To spend time with his family and to ensure their safety while the Syrian war was raging in his village was hard, involving costly crossings between warring territories, detentions for Amer and sieges for his family. Since 2017, his wife Khadija and their three children have come and gone for brief stays in Beirut: the first time in a flat whose owner raised the rent and prevented them from putting up internal barriers to between their living spaces and those of Ethiopian domestic workers who shared their flat; the second time in a room in a cheaper flat shared with two other Syrian families but where he was allowed to build a separate bathroom for his family while the kitchen and small entrance remained communal.

Though migrant sojourns may be defined by “erratic and uncertain rhythms” and “short-termism”[ii] this does not foreclose their ability to maintain social networks and cohesion that foster wellbeing within their communities[iii]. Rather, where these networks exist, and they often did, they are vital to enabling migrant dwelling and wellbeing in the neighborhood. They form an economy of reciprocity built around the circulation, exchange and donation of material goods and services between relatives, neighbors and friends. Of setting up in either flat, Amer said: “We furnished the place gradually, with items from here and there. I bought a used fridge, a friend who returned to Syria gave me a bed… My cousin who is a plumber helped me install the bathroom.”

The exchanges also include financial loans taken from other co-nationals, or small informal micro-creditors. By spring 2019, Amer had incurred five thousand dollars’ worth of debt to various family members, from the repeated trips and moves and an incident of entrapment he experienced in Damascus. Paying rent in Ras Beirut for his family was no longer viable, especially if was to repay his debts, so he sent them back to live in their village. Showing me images on his mobile phone of his property, he consoled himself that his house was at least not destroyed like those of thousands rather than live in confined make-shift conditions here, they had the comfort of his three-bedroom home surrounded by vast fields and fresh air where the kids can play. Several of the migrants I have spoken to mentioned taking loans, the Syrians amongst them from friends or Syrian employers, while Ella, a Philippine domestic worker said she and her friends were in a constant cycle of taking out and repaying loans collectively from informal micro-creditors mainly to keep up with tuition costs for their college children back home.

Various forms of sharing, of resources, household items or spaces, are vital to enabling migrant dwelling in the residues of Ras Beirut. Rendering such spaces livable and affordable also entails parceling up flats to accommodate several households or individuals who can then share rent, agreeing amongst themselves over terms of access to communal spaces and collectively harnessing available amenities from the vicinity and splitting their cost. You need enough roommates to afford rents and bills, but not too many to have over-crowded living quarters with over-burdened physical infrastructures. According to Bassem, a long-term Syrian sponsored worker who shares a four-bedroom flat with ten migrant men, “We are in exceptional circumstances that force us to live together when we would normally never do so.”

For Ella, who after fifteen years living with employers moved to a rented room in a run-down building, affording independent housing relies not just on delicate spatial distribution but on the ease of access to communal spaces and facilities. To afford her life in the flat, as she continues housekeeping for her sponsoring employers and free-lancing, she also has to ensure frequent enough access to the kitchen she shares with three other flat-mates, so she can prepare Philippine food to sell for supplementary income. She also has to have the freedom to cook her dishes, which include fried fish without drawing complaints about the smell from neighbors and subsequent prevention (and possibly eviction) from owners.

Aesthetic Stigma as Disabling Entitlement to Dwelling

Stigmas based on the sensory or aesthetic quality of spaces where migrants live often serve to constrain their movement and delegitimize their presence in the neighborhood and the country. On 22 May 2019, Beirut municipal police evicted ninety Syrian and ten Bangladeshi male migrant workers and twenty Syrian families. Pictures of their living quarters and of them squatting on the sidewalk with their belongings circulated social media, though not very widely. Reports alleged the migrants were squatting without the permission, and the eviction followed repeated complaints from neighbors about their “presence… screaming… [and] smells.”

In similar vein, the Lebanese neighbor living beside Bassem complained to me about the “dirt and smells and disgusting sights” coming from the building where in addition to single or unaccompanied men, nine Syrian families live one to a room on three floors. “Their children make noise all day, and they do not know how to raise them… All of Lebanon was disturbed by their presence,” she said. A mother of two of the small kids in question told me, “Children make noise when they play. What can we do about that?” But it means she and her flatmates cannot use the garden below the house to change scenery. Formal complaints from unknown sources reached the building’s owners, about the children’s noises, though not those of the hundreds of children attending the public school across the street until 2pm daily. While one of the owners threatened to evict all the dwellers as a result, his brother promised them secure housing; the outcome remaining uncertain to Bassem and the families.

Stigmas about the noisy, unsightly, and unsanitary presence of migrants of various provenance, contribute to their marginalization and dehumanization (Baumann 2018). Many of my interlocutors expressed feeling out of place and discriminated against, especially Syrians who expected empathy from Lebanese nationals whom they regard as fellow Arabs. Yet for the most part, their structural invisibility while variable according to race and legal status (sponsored workers, refugees or migrants without papers), prompts an expectation that they also remain actually invisible in the neighborhood.

Conclusion

The derelict buildings of Beirut are themselves objects of precarity. Neglected, they often draw similar complaints from neighbors about pest infestation and busted infrastructures and debris. Structurally vulnerable, they are sometimes at risk of collapse or demolition. Places where migrants settle are “historically neglected” by ghettoization or slumification (Ford et al. 2018: 2), and I would add by deliberate enclaves of decay that the property-led real estate market and its speculative nature routinely instrumentalize (Kanafani 2017).

While migrants’ housing vulnerability is part of a housing crisis most affecting the urban poor in Lebanon, migrants are among the most vulnerable, lacking legal rental contracts and relying on the benevolence of powerful patrons to maintain housing. An ethnographic exploration of these micro-geographies of precarity (Muñoz 2018) reveals how migrants are en masse a particularly convenient category of occupants of residual spaces. Their make-shift dwellings, while malleable to delicate and enabling arrangements, are stigmatized and undermined, rendering migrants readily the brunt of impromptu expulsions to make way for regeneration projects or to appease the complaints of urban residents with more social capital.

When migrant workers in Lebanon reside within the properties of their employers, building codes and profit-oriented real estate practices institutionalize their inhumane living conditions by routinely relegated them to neglected and residual spaces (Saad 2016) as domestic or construction workers, or as building and parking attendants. The regimes of habitation within Lebanese hosts’ homes are metonymically reproduced at the neighborhood scale, where the derelict buildings that remain standing constitute the residual spaces, which are purposefully neglected as sites of speculation, and where as a result, precarious migrants are most likely to live.

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References

Hannah Baumann, “The Intimacy of Infrastructure: Vulnerability and Abjection in Palestinian Jerusalem,”  in Planned Violence (2018),  edited by E. Boehmer and D. Davies, 137–57.

Ella Harris and Mel Nowicki, “Cultural Geographies of Precarity,” Cultural Geographies 25, no. 3 (2018): 387–91.

Ford, Hart, Dolf te Lintelo, and Vivienne Benson. “Urban Refugees in Lebanon: Housing, Residency, and Wellbeing,” IDS Policy Briefings, no. 151 (2018).

Samar Kanafani, “Made to Fall Apart: An Ethnography of Old Houses and Urban Renewal in Beirut,” University of Manchester (2016).

Solange Muñoz, “Precarious City: Home-Making and Eviction in Buenos Aires, Argentina.” Cultural Geographies 25, no. 3 (2018): 411–24.

Bassem Saad, “The 5m2 Maid’s Room: Lebanon’s Racist, Gendered Architecture,” Failed Architecture (2016). Retrieved September 4, 2019.

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[i] All names have been invented, and all identifying traits modified to maximize interlocutors’ anonymity.

[This article was originally published by Jadaliyya on 19 December, 2019.]

Thinking Through Vulnerability: How Conceptual Approaches Shape Infrastructural Response

Thinking Through Vulnerability: How Conceptual Approaches Shape Infrastructural Response

[This article is drawn from a paper presented by the author at the Vulnerability, Infrastructure, and Displacement Symposium (2019), as part of the panel on “Vulnerability and the (Built) Environment.” Click herehere, and here for other articles drawn from the same panel.]

This article reads notions of “vulnerability” employed in the humanitarian response to the Syrian refugee crisis in Lebanon against recent feminist and urbanist debates on the links between infrastructure and vulnerability. In doing so, it seeks to introduce and grapple with some of the key terms of the symposium. I argue that how we conceive of vulnerability impacts how we seek to address it. Thinking vulnerability in terms relationality and interdependency allows us to critically interrogate how humanitarian actors operating in Lebanon–who necessarily see vulnerability as a condition to be overcome–have employed the term in the context of the response to the Syrian crisis. Based on interviews as well as participant observation among UN agencies, international NGOs, and local NGOs working on the Syrian crisis response in Lebanon conducted in 2018-19, I examine several levels at which humanitarian actors conceptualise, measure, and seek to address (infrastructural) vulnerabilities.

Judith Butler views the always-vulnerable human body as fundamentally characterized by dependency on support systems beyond itself,[1] which she also describes as “infrastructure.”[2] Even though, to her, this denotes both human and non-human support systems, Butler’s understanding of vulnerability echoes Matthew Gandy’s work on cyborg urbanism: he describes infrastructures as a form of ”exoskeleton”[3]–that is, as extensions of our bodily selves upon which we rely for our very survival. Thus, vulnerability is intrinsically linked to infrastructure: our reliance on the circulations and services provided by others also creates a level of risk for disruption and harm. If we understand vulnerability in this way, refugees, having moved involuntarily, are lacking at least some of these support systems–be they physical environment, usual services and amenities, or social ties. They are, then, by definition more vulnerable than those who have not been displaced.

The Lebanese government’s “policy of no policy” vis-à-vis displaced Syrians leaves most without a legal framework to ensure the right to residency, work, or even free movement. Instead, local authorities devise individual responses.[4] Beyond the support system of a legal status or guaranteed rights, many Syrian refugees are also disconnected from physical infrastructures. The eighteen percent of displaced people living in tented settlements (informal refugee camps on private land) are explicitly not connected to wider water and sewage networks. Such linkages are politically controversial as they would be a material manifestation of a longer-term stay, and thus embody anxieties about the displaced settling permanently in Lebanon. Beyond the functional impact (not having running water or a functioning toilet), such infrastructural exclusion also always operates on a symbolic register:[5] the stigma that is advanced through abjection and the exclusion from infrastructure’s aura of modernity can act as an additional threat by legitimising dispossession or displacement. It can thus turn into a tangible risk as when the Litani River Authority evicted over 1,500 Syrians from along the river bank for the pollution their informal settlements caused.

Both Lebanon’s lacking infrastructural provision to all its residents and the ecological crisis emanating from this are frequently blamed on refugees. Official publications of the Ministry of Environment, for instance, attribute responsibility for water pollution to the Syrian crisis. This is despite the fact that Lebanon’s infrastructural crisis precedes the influx of Syrian refugees and “uneven geographies” of infrastructural distribution have long exacerbated existing inequalities.[6] The case of the Litani reflects the interdependency of displaced and “host” communities, whose living spaces and health are tied up through the human and non-human chains of waste disposal, drinking water, and food production. This interdependency means that even individual or private “solutions” to the lacking infrastructural supply, be they open-air defecation or buying bottled water from illegal wells, affect wider systems. They seep back into bodies and do harm, albeit sometimes at slow time scales and in microscopic sizes.[7] Our bodies are not bounded, we are always beyond ourselves (Butler refers to this quality as being “ecstatic”[8]), and vulnerable to those who are and that which is beyond ourselves. Viewing infrastructures as the manifestations of the way in which refugee-host, as well as built-and-“natural”-environment and human-non-human, relations are entangled and mutually influence one another, rather than the basis of conflict in a zero sum game, acknowledges people’s shared vulnerability. This relationality and interdependence differentiate infrastructural vulnerability from the “infrastructural violence” urban studies scholars have located in the inequitable distribution of resources, and consequently, life chances, by way of infrastructures.[9]

The recent proliferation of “vulnerability” discourse among humanitarian organisations can be understood as a means for them to limit their responsibility vis-a-vis the groups under their mandate by prioritising the “most vulnerable.”[10] Vulnerability, according to Butler, is both an ontological condition–everyone is vulnerable through their embodied exposure to the world and Others in it–and a political issue–in that some are (made) more vulnerable than others. She refers to the universal condition as “precarity” and the politically-induced one as “precariousness.”[11] The “vulnerability criteria” employed by many humanitarian actors and used in the resettlement process, however, fail to see vulnerability in this manner; instead, they locate the onus of the problem in individual members of those groups reified as “vulnerable.” Yet thinking of vulnerability as reliance on support systems makes visible the structural nature of privilege: Those not deemed vulnerable benefit from a scaffolding of support systems that enable them – rather than those deemed “vulnerable” being less complete or fully human. The often generic criteria for receiving assistance can make invisible the vulnerability some seemingly less deserving groups, such as single men, who are vulnerable to discrimination and violence as well as forced recruitment.[12] Further, these criteria obfuscate the structures that enable some people and disable others, and thus depoliticise the underlying inequalities, avoiding transformational thinking.

Tools to measure socio-economic vulnerability at the household level, such as the “Desk Formula” used to determine refugees’ eligibility for cash-based aid, are often very complex, in an attempt to ground decisions of aid inclusion and exclusion in “robust” and “scientific” methods. At the same time, they are intentionally obscure, both to humanitarian employees and to recipients. The latter, meanwhile, become increasingly transparent as vast amounts of data about them–ranging from their iris scans to their sexual habits–are collected, shared, and mined using advanced machine learning techniques. The opacity of programmes, the transparency of “beneficiaries,” as well as lacking data security, thus become meta-vulnerabilities arising from the aid response itself. However, the cash assistance for which the Desk Formula is deployed appears to have little long-term effect in improving vulnerability measures, as UN representatives noted. Thus, we might ask what other purposes injecting large sums (1.2 billion dollars annually, with a multiplier value of up to 2.4 when spent) into the Lebanese economy through these programmes might have. The aim of donors here appears to be stabilising Lebanon, most likely with the aim of containing the crisis in the region, rather than meaningfully improving people’s livelihoods.

The numerous projects that seek to address social issues through infrastructure, such as the Lebanese Host Communities Support Programme, appear to serve similar aims. This particular project operates on the basis of the following “Theory of Change”: that social stability (the absence of violent outbursts between Lebanese and Syrians) can be ensured by providing more infrastructural services on the municipal level and thus strengthening the legitimacy of state actors. It follows this logic although UN representatives from the Social Stability sector note that lack of infrastructural services is not the cause of most intercommunal tension or violence against refugees. Vulnerability, here, is conceived as a conflict over resources and a problem of lacking trust in the state–notably not the lacking trustworthiness of the state. In fact, despite aiming to compensate for a “weak state,” delivering aid through “communities” can deepen sectarian divisions, as Nucho has argued.[13] These kinds of stabilisation programmes, then, much like the large-scale loans for public works promised during the CEDRE conference, aim to use infrastructure to stabilise the country.

These projects under these programmes, and indeed the vast coordinated humanitarian effort under the Lebanon Crisis Response Plan, is based on conceptualising vulnerability as the counterpart to resilience, viewed the capacity to recover from or resist shocks. Therefore, humanitarian vulnerability thinking appears to aspire for a return to a mythical point of equilibrium. What such a presumed point of stability and normality might be in Lebanon’s history is unclear; as Davoudi notes, this kind of resilience thinking often fails to critically assess what a “return to normal” might entail.[14] Viewing vulnerability as the absence of an assumed state of wholeness and self-containment in this way denies our interdependence–that we are always beyond ourselves and always already bound up with one another. The bounded notion of resilience reflected in many aid projects is linked to donor countries aiming to defend their own boundaries–by enabling circulations through infrastructure on a local level in Lebanon, they seek to contain the Syrian refugee crisis at a distance from their borders. Thus, the production of infrastructures becomes itself part of a global infrastructure of control, in which boundaries are maintained to create the illusion of self-sufficiency. Vulnerability as projected onto the other, then, is linked to the denial of the vulnerability of interconnected selves.

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[1] Judith Butler, Precarious Life: The Powers of Mourning and Violence, (London: Verso, 2004) and Frames of War: When Is Life Grievable?, (London: Verso, 2010).

[2]  Judith Butler, “Rethinking Vulnerability and Resistance” in Vulnerability in Resistance, ed. J. Butler, Z. Gambetti & L. Sabsay (North Carolina: Duke University Press, 2016), 12.

[3] Matthew Gandy, “Cyborg Urbanization: Complexity and Monstrosity in the Contemporary City,” International Journal of Urban and Regional Research 29, no. 1 (2005): 26–49.

[4] Tamirace Fakhoury, “Governance strategies and refugee response: Lebanon in the face of Syrian displacement,” International Journal of Middle East Studies 49, no. 4 (2017): 681-700.

[5] Brian Larkin, “The Politics and Poetics of Infrastructure,” Annual Review of Anthropology 42, no. 1 (2013): 327-43.

[6] Eric Verdeil, “Beirut. The Metropolis of Darkness and the Politics of Urban Electricity Grid”, in Energy, Power and Protest on the Urban Grid. Geographies of the Electric City, ed. Andres Luque Ayala and Jonathan Silver (Abingdon: Routledge, 2016), 155-175.

[7] Rob Nixon, Slow Violence and the environmentalism of the poor (London: Harvard University Press, 2011).

[8] Butler, Frames of War: 33

[9] Cf. Stephen Graham and Simon Marvin, Splintering Urbanism: Networked Infrastructures, Technological Mobilities and the Urban Condition (London: Routledge, 2001) and Dennis Rodgers and Bruce O’Neill, “Infrastructural Violence: Introduction to the Special Issue,” Ethnography 13, no. 4 (2012): 401-12.

[10] Hande Sözer, “Humanitarianism with a neo-liberal face: vulnerability intervention as vulnerability redistribution,” Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies (2019) DOI: 10.1080/1369183X.2019.1573661

[11] Butler, Precarious Life and Frames of War.

[12] Cf. Elena Fiddian-Qasmiyeh, “Gender Audit Report of the High Commissioner’s Dialogue on Protection Challenges – Towards a Global Compact on Refugees”, Geneva 12 -13 December 2017 and Lewis Turner, “Syrian refugee men as objects of humanitarian care” International Feminist Journal of Politics (2019) https://doi.org/10.1080/14616742.2019.1641127

[13] Joanne Randa Nucho, Everyday Sectarianism in Urban Lebanon: Infrastructures, Public Services, and Power (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 2016).

[14] Simin Davoudi, “Resilience: A Bridging Concept or a Dead End?,” Planning Theory & Practice 13, no 2 (2012): 302.

[This article was originally posted by Jadaliyya on 19 December, 2019.]