Blog

Syria’s Urbicide: The Built Environment as a Means to Consolidate Homogeneity

by Sawsan Abou Zainedin and Hani Fakhani on July 26, 2019

To download the full paper please click here.

Executive Summary

The Syrian regime has been significantly tampering with the built environment in Syria over the past
years in order to realise and sustain political achievements. This paper explores this dimension of the
Syrian conflict through the lens of urbicide. It argues that different violent urban arrangements – both
destructive and constructive – have been enforced in the Syrian context to consolidate the regime’s
authoritarian power and eradicate socio-political diversity. These arrangements include:

• the indiscriminate, systematic destruction of residential areas and vital civilian facilities in
opposition areas;
• the deliberate post-battle demolitions of residential neighbourhoods;
• systematic prolonged sieges and the weaponisation of aid delivery to besieged areas;
• forced eviction and population transfer;
• blocking return to recaptured opposition areas; and
• discriminatory reconstruction frameworks that favour regime cronies.

The paper concludes that this violent configuration of Syria’s built environment is an attempt to
eradicate the populations of opposition areas, hence, instating political homogeneity. It further serves
economic interests, as it transforms the general conditions for capital accumulation in a way that
fortifies the despotic character of the regime. Finally, this strategy also runs along sectarian lines,
building on and sustaining Syria’s socio-economic and political hierarchies.

Sawsan Abou Zainedin presented this paper at the keynote session of the 5th Lemkin Reunion, held in March
2019 and organized by the Shattuck Center at the School of Public Policy, Central European University in
Budapest.

Other publications from the 5th Lemkin Reunion can be found in the papers section of the Aleppo Project
website. 

To download the full paper please click here

Sawsan Abou Zainedin and Hani FakhaniSyria’s Urbicide: The Built Environment as a Means to Consolidate Homogeneity

Join the conversation