By Innocent Dande and Sandra Swart – The Conversation Africa
DOGS are political. Their very existence in modern cities has goaded those in power into trying to discipline them – and their owners.
This has happened in the past too: for instance, authorities trying to modernise Paris in the 19
th century regarded stray dogs as belonging to the “city’s criminal, dirty and rootless dangerous classes to be slaughtered”.
But similar campaigns against stray dogs in Bombay in 1832 resulted in civil protest, used as an opportunity to challenge aspects of colonial rule.
Our own study focused on changes in regimes regulating dogs, especially those owned by Africans, between 1980 and 2017 in Zimbabwe’s capital, Harare.
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