Lamine Doumbia

Senior Tandem Fellow

1 August 2025 - 31 January 2026

Dr. Lamine Doumbia is a research associate at the Institute of Asian and African Studies, Department of African History, Humboldt University Berlin, and a member of the Lebenswelt in Krisen (LinC) research group at the University of Leipzig. He previously held a postdoctoral fellowship at the University of Bayreuth’s Excellence Cluster Africa Multiple and co-founded the interdisciplinary Fellow Group 6 at the Merian Institute for Advanced Studies in Africa (MIASA), University of Ghana. Additionally, he was a postdoctoral fellow at the German Historical Institute Paris, contributing to the project The Bureaucratisation of African Societies, based in Dakar.

His research centres on land tenure questions and bureaucratisation in Bamako, Ouagadougou, and Dakar. He earned his PhD in Social Anthropology from the University of Bayreuth and is the author of the monograph Une sécurisation foncière urbaine dans l’impasse – exemple de Bamako, Mali.

Currently, Dr. Doumbia is engaged as a tandem fellow at MIASA, University of Ghana, collaborating with Dr. Mahamadou Bassirou Tangara to investigate markets and urban challenges in West African cities.

MIASA Project: Dynamiques des marchés urbains et conflits d'usages autour des places de marché à Bamako, Accra et Kumasi

Français
Dans ce projet de recherche, nous analysons les dynamiques des marchés urbains en Afrique de l’Ouest à travers leurs dimensions économique, sociale, spatiale et politique, en portant une attention particulière aux conflits d’usages dans des espaces de marché de plus en plus soumis à des logiques municipales néolibérales. Si le rôle central des marchés dans l’économie urbaine est largement reconnu, leurs fonctions plurielles et leurs impacts élargis demeurent insuffisamment investigués. S’appuyant sur un cadre analytique interdisciplinaire, l’étude mobilise des cas d’étude à Bamako, Accra et Kumasi afin d’explorer les interactions complexes entre autorités municipales, leaderships endogènes et commerçants. Les objectifs principaux sont d’analyser les représentations locales des marchés, d’examiner les modalités de gestion municipale, et d’évaluer les stratégies développées par les commerçants et d’autres acteurs face à la bureaucratisation. La méthodologie mixte, combinant enquêtes de terrain, analyses documentaires et entretiens, permet de produire des données empiriques approfondies qui enrichissent la compréhension des marchés urbains au-delà de leur fonction économique, en soulignant leurs dimensions sociales et politiques. En définitive, ce projet met en lumière la nature multidimensionnelle des réseaux marchands urbains africains et leur insertion au sein du tissu socio-économique des villes étudiées, contribuant ainsi aux débats actuels en sciences sociales et humaines.
English
In this research project, we investigate the dynamics of urban markets in West Africa by analysing their economic, social, spatial, and political dimensions, with a particular emphasis on the challenges related to the use of market spaces increasingly shaped by neoliberal municipal policies. While markets are widely recognised for their central economic role, their multifaceted functions and broader impacts remain underexplored. Utilising an interdisciplinary analytical framework, the study draws on case studies from Bamako, Accra, and Kumasi to explore the complex interactions among municipal authorities, endogenous leadership, and market traders. The project has three main objectives: to examine local perceptions and meanings of markets, to assess municipal management strategies, and to explore traders’ responses among others to bureaucratic governance. Through a mixed-methods approach, including field surveys, document analysis, and interviews, the research produces rich empirical insights that expand the understanding of urban markets beyond mere economic transactions, highlighting their vital social and political roles. Ultimately, the project sheds light on the multifaceted nature of urban market networks in Africa and their deep embeddedness within the socio-economic fabric of the cities studied, offering valuable contributions to the social sciences and humanities.

Selected publications

Ngom, S. & Doumbia, L. (2025) La Résurgence de la Violence, De l’Instabilité Et du Terrorisme au Mali: Une Faillite de l’État? In: Ebodé, J.V. & Yogo, E.E., L’État africain: acteur ou objet de sécurité? Tome 1 https://generis publishing.com/plugins/pdf_preview/index.php?id=3227
Doumbia, L., & Tangara, D. (2024): Des stratégies de contournement à l’hybridation, Canadian Journal of African Studies. https://doi.org/10.1080/00083968.2024.2356888
Sabbi, M., Neubert, D., & Doumbia, L. (2024): People and municipalities: decentralisation and the articulation of agency in local political arenas in Africa, Canadian Journal of African Studies. https://doi.org/10.1080/00083968.2024.2374572
Doumbia, L. (2024): “Ancestors’ Land Does No Longer Exist?”, Merian Institute for Advanced Studies in Africa – Blog. https://miasa.hypotheses.org/3377
Sabbi, M.; Doumbia, L.; Neubert, D. (2020): Dynamics of Everyday Life within Municipal Administrations in Francophone and Anglophone Africa, Africa Spectrum. https://doi.org/10.1177/0002039720914630
Doumbia, L. (2021): Eviction and Relocation in West Africa. A Socio-Anthropological Essay on Bureaucratized Processes, Forschungen zur westeuropäischen Geschichte, 48. https://doi.org/10.11588/fr.2021.1.93965

Personal website

Institute:
Humboldt University Berlin

Year:
2025/2026