
Some urban environments require permanent and flexible mobility of goods and people as a condition to allow the urban life itself, the participation in society and the basic sustenance. Threatened by the pandemics, such environments face challenges that cannot be analyzed through Western-based cognitive paradigms.
The article discusses urban fragilities in Sub-Saharan Africa in the light of Covid prevention measures by analyzing mobility patterns in Maputo as fundamental drivers for the city’s spatial co-production.
Epistemologically redefining the concepts of urban and mobility, the article proposes strategies of analysis and of capillary observation that clearly need the careful development of a data governance ecosystem.