ANIMAPOLIS aims to understand the role of animals in the formation of urban inequalities, asking: How do animals’ interactions with humans and infrastructures co-produce the unequal distribution of risks and resources across urban spaces and populations? It focuses on two critical urban domains, security and public health, that are often characterized by stark inequalities, and takes the role of key animals within these domains –dogs and rats, respectively– as a unique analytical entry-point.
Urban inequalities are not only produced by people. Security dogs are socialized to identify threatening individuals on the basis of classed and raced markers. Rats pose a public health risk, and thrive in low-income areas with decaying sanitation infrastructure. Urban scholars have begun to highlight the importance of infrastructures and technologies in configuring access to essential goods and services. While this research provides key insights into how nonhuman entities mediate unequal relations, it has largely overlooked how certain animals –“political animals”– also co-produce inequalities.
Dogs and rats clearly play a role within security and public health, but we know little about how they mediate related inequalities. Through what mechanisms might security dogs co-produce practices of racial profiling, or distributions of rats and rodenticides affect public health outcomes? This project studies such mechanisms by focusing first, on dogs’ and rats’ biological specificities and cultural imaginaries and second, on the spatial, material and affective dimensions of their interactions with humans and infrastructure. The project develops a two-way qualitative comparison, between different urban contexts and between different animals, through multispecies ethnographies in Amsterdam and Rio de Janeiro. The project’s more-than-human approach extends theoretical and methodological innovations in urban anthropology and geography to open new horizons on the study of urban inequalities.
To answer the main research question, the project pursues five research objectives related to: the development of new multispecies methodologies (RO1); the identification of everyday urban interactions and relations in the domain of security between dogs, humans and socio-technical systems (RO2) and in the domain of public health between rats, humans and socio-technical systems (RO3); comparing mechanisms through which these animal-human-infrastructure dynamics co-produce socio-spatial boundaries and unequal distributions (RO4) and theorize the role of animals in the formation of urban inequalities (RO5).