1. Introduction
The utilization of public space as a terrain for political discourses and collective contestation has developed into a significant urban trend, engaging popular academic attention [
1,
2,
3,
4,
5]. This attention has witnessed a novel turn in the last decade, following the Occupy Wall Street movement, the Arab Spring, and the Occupy Gezi Park movement, in Istanbul [
6,
7,
8,
9]. Such a turn is considered as an opportunity for creating more democratic and social spaces [
4,
10,
11]. Several academicians accentuate the significance and importance of democratic political spaces in society [
7,
9,
10,
12,
13,
14]. In addition, the ephemeral use of “occupied” territory and public space has been noted as a critique of the production of the common and an instrument for change [
3,
14]. Therefore, this topic must be scrutinized, inspected, and analyzed in terms of its settings, conditions, norms, and practices.
The topic has previously motivated crucial inquiries into the concepts of the right to the city and the production of space [
15,
16], the just city [
17,
18,
19], and the right to revolution [
16]. Nonetheless, this article concentrates on the relationship between the occupation of public space as a collective human action and the dynamics of space production and activities, which position the topic in a broader perspective of social, political, and cultural transformation. This article is based on a theoretical but contextual approach, that is substantiated by the conviction that the best method to comprehend a spatial phenomenon and experience is the examination of its process of production [
15]. Otherwise stated, space itself does not have a peculiar meaning: its numerous meanings and values are dictated by the set of activities generated by the different groups of inhabitants who are involved in its planning, appropriation, utilization, development, and management [
1].
Indeed, the occupation of urban spaces directly contests the power structure by challenging the power, functions, and symbolisms that produced that space [
7,
15,
20]. Hence, the employment of the occupied space and its production and appropriation cannot be detached from the process of production and consumption of space with its multilayered dimensions, including the political, social, economic, and cultural [
15].
The paper focuses on the sit-in space that was constructed during Sudan’s December 2018 revolution, as a unique form of public space occupation and appropriation. The deliberation on the roots and the impacts of the December uprising in Sudan and the occupied sit-in space on public space production, appropriation, and consumption continues to occupy scholars [
4,
21]. The unfolding of events in April and May of 2019 in the
al-Qeyada sit-in space in Khartoum—the place where protestors deliberated, designed, and created their temporal city—is a fertile field for researchers and scientists. Indeed, the sit-in space and the protests that led to overthrowing al-Bashir regime were not merely the latest installments of a series of movements of resistance against the authoritarian rule. The occupation of public space as a tool of political activism witnessed a new turn in Sudan after April 2019. The consequences of Khartoum’s sit-in events are likely to mark a juncture where space production and appropriation strategies and methods instigate a new frontier of research among scholars and activists.
The history of public discourses in Sudan documented that the previous two Sudanese revolutions took place in the public space. The first Sudanese revolution, in 1964, was strongly represented in
Midan al-Shuhada, in front of the Republic Palace, in Khartoum’s downtown [
22]. April
Intifada’s revolution of 1985, however, unfolded in both
Abu-Ginzeer Square and
al-Gasr Park (previously
Midan al-Shuhada) [
23]. Despite the lack of relevant literature, the politics of public space seems to be strongly associated with Sudan’s modern history. Many public spaces in Khartoum are well known for their political images, as they have exhibited or continued to show political messages and expectations. Examples include
Midan Agrab, in Khartoum North city; United Nations Square;
Midan al-Shuhada, in Omdurman; Six of April Park;
Abu-Ginzeer Square, in Khartoum; and
Midan Burry, in eastern Khartoum.
However, since the al-Bashir military coup in 1989, public space in Khartoum has been unceasingly privatized [
24], neglected [
25,
26], and segregated [
27]. This process is visible in open spaces, riverfronts, rural landscapes, urban green areas, parks, squares, and even streets. Spaces like the International Park in Khartoum; Khartoum and Omdurman riverfronts;
al-Mogran family Park; Six of April Park; the National Zoo; the Family Park; and United Nations square, in Khartoum, have entirely or partially lost their civic title and were progressively privatized, segregated or controlled. The control over the public realm practiced by the previous regime extended beyond the public space to private open spaces. Spaces like the
Atanei coffee shop Square, in Khartoum’s downtown, which hosted the famous
Mfroosh social and cultural event. The controversial nature of its political activities eventually led to its closure.
The aforementioned examples show that public spaces during the last regime were either places for passage [
24] or to show off state dominance and control [
25]. Consequently, those spaces were designed fearfully or marginally, in a way that has triggered a struggle between architecture, the local people, and the state [
22]. Under these circumstances, the Nile spring in Sudan has challenged several of the political, social, and economic forces that have shaped—and continue to shape—the public realm, the public sphere, and the public domain. It is in this context that any “right to Khartoum city” must be developed. The contest to reclaim this right was demonstrated in the sit-in space occupation and the events that followed.
2. The Revolution, Democracy and Public Space
A cursory reading of the scholarly work on the production of space, place-making, and democracy demonstrates how these three fundamental urban terms were often espoused. The point of departure and intellectual inspiration for the production of space, as well as much current work on the right to the city, commences with the work of Henri Lefebvre. In his seminal work, “The Production of Space”, Lefebvre studied struggles over the meaning of space. He reflected on how relations across terrains were given cultural meaning through a three-dimensional dialectic on the production of space as related to the “right to the city”. Lefebvre identified the spatialities of social existence and the ways in which those spatialities are produced, lived, and experienced [
15]. In his theory, Lefebvre indicated that the production of space could be divided analytically into three dialectically interrelated dimensions or processes. These dimensions, or “formants”, are (1) the representations of space, (2) the representational space, and (3) the spatial practices [
15].
Representations of space or the “conceived space” try to command social relations. These spaces are produced by city planners, real estate developers, technocrats, and bureaucrats. Hence, those spaces are “tied to the relations of production and to the ‘order’ which those relations impose, and hence to knowledge, to signs, to codes” [
15] (p. 33). Representations of space tell the inhabitants what to do—or not to do, what is allowed—and what is not allowed in a certain space. Those spaces are influenced by knowledge and ideology. Representational spaces or the “lived space”, however, are those spaces produced by inhabitants via their daily use. Such spaces are directly lived in everyday life. Lefebvre described those spaces as “linked to the clandestine or underground side of social life, as also to art” [
15] (p. 33). Spatial practice or the “perceived space” refers to the production and reproduction of a particular social formation, such as capitalism [
15] (p. 33).
Lefebvre’s spatial triad elucidates the struggle over the production of space in the urban context. In this regard, he differentiates between what he calls the “industrial city” and “urban society” [
28]. For Lefebvre, the industrial city is the city that is profoundly shaped by private property and exchange value. In such a city, the dominant social and spatial practices segregate inhabitants [
28]. The urban inhabitants in the industrial city are politically inactive, and they behave as consumers rather than citizens [
29]. In contrast, in urban society, urban space is governed by inhabitants who appropriate space and utilize it to achieve their needs. In urban society, inhabitants are at the center of space, in which they engage in cooperative and meaningful negotiations about the city they want [
28,
29].
Comparable arguments have been deployed in reference to the right to the city and the urban revolution in Harvey [
16]. Stimulated by the modern waves of urban struggles, Harvey [
16] cross-examines the right to the city in which he defines as “… not merely a right of access to what exists, but a right to change it after our heart’s desire. We need to be sure we can live with our own creations… But the right to remake ourselves by creating a qualitatively different kind of urban sociality is one of the most precious of all human rights” [
16] (p. 236). In his investigation, Harvey [
16] argues that “The urban obviously functions, then, as an important site of political action and revolt. The actual site characteristics are important, and the physical and social re-engineering and territorial organization of these sites is a weapon in political struggle”. For Harvey, cities have been radically transformed in the interests of capital, which resulted in less democratic spaces [
16] (p. 118). Building on Lefebvre’s essay on the right to the city, Harvey [
16] calls for radically democratic cities and more equitable, playful, and meaningful spaces. Harvey also warns that in the absence of the right to the city, cities will offer alternatives to neo-liberalism in local settings. Therefore, cities will tremble under waves of discontent exercising their right to the city, which he defines as claiming “… some kind of shaping power over the processes of urbanization, over the ways in which our cities are made and remade, and to do so in a fundamental and radical way”. Harvey [
16], considers urban revolution—notably Occupy Wall Street—as an endeavor to transform public space into a political common, and this common must be collective and non-commodified, like Habermas’s public sphere [
30].
Several other investigations have attempted to provide a different perspective on how to connect urban design, revolution, and public spaces. More precisely, how to dictate the bond between people and space, as well as how to measure the quality of an occupied space. We recall four compelling concepts that highlight this notion in imperative ways. For instance, Gottdiener & Hutchison [
31] highlight that though economic, political, and social institutions create, and recreate, urban space, the meaning of these spaces is generated by local inhabitants. Otherwise stated, space is not merely a container of people and activities; urban space both creates specific patterns of social relations and is continually changed and recreated by the social networks that take place there. Such creation is quite similar to Lefebvre’s [
15] “conceived” and “lived space”. Although Gottdiener & Hutchison [
31] have provided a general conception of how to measure the quality of the occupied space, utilizing place meaning and activities, they did not provide a criterion of success to benchmark the meaning of the occupied space.
Scannell & Gifford [
32] presented an exciting tripartite model of the relationship between people and places. Their framework proposes that place attachment is a multidimensional concept involving a person, a psychological process, and place dimensions. The first dimension of Scannell & Gifford’s [
32] model is the actor; this entails the following questions: Who is attached? To what extent is the attachment based on individually and collectively held meanings? The second dimension is the psychological process: How are affect, cognition, and behavior manifested in the attachment? The third dimension is the object of the attachment, including place characteristics: What is the attachment to, and what is the nature of, this place? [
32]. Scannell & Gifford’s framework has explained some of the complexities found in Gottdiener & Hutchison’s [
31] perception of the quality—or the meaning—of the public space. In other words, Scannell & Gifford make it clear that we can measure the quality of public spaces—at least in principle—by asking: (1) Who are the actors? (2) How is the behavior manifested in space (the activities)?, and (3) What is the nature of the place (the physical setting)?
Looking at public space through the prism of planning, Carmona [
33] proposes a set of ten rules that make public space successful. These rules, which describe the character of space are: (1) Evolving (whether formal or informal in nature); (2) Diverse (avoiding one-size-fits-all); (3) Free (with secure rights and responsibilities); (4) Delineated (clearly public in their use); (5) Engaging (designing of active uses); (6) Meaningful (incorporating notable amenities and features); (7) Social (encouraging social engagement); (8) Balanced (between traffic and pedestrians); (9) Comfortable; and (10) Robust (adaptable and distinct in the face of change). In the same regard, the Project for Public Space (PPS) claimed that “a successful public space generally needs to offer four qualities: it should be accessible, it should be comfortable and have a good image, people should be able to engage in an array of activities, and, it should be sociable” [
34].
Both Carmona [
33] and the Project for Public Space [
34] emphasized the importance not only of the activities in public spaces but also of how these activities transform into a collective social construct. In other words, they both highlighted the importance of the social and physical settings while measuring the space quality. Interestingly, some of these criteria fit nicely with Lefebvre’s [
15] and Harvey’s [
16] definition of the right to the city, as well as with Lefebvre’s [
15] spatial triad. Notably, the way in which the quality of space is attached to the process of its production—whether it is a perceived or a conceived space. In addition, the scholarly work exhibited above emphasized the importance of collective action, diversity, and meaning while shaping or reshaping those spaces.
The narrative presented above exemplifies that the struggle over the urban spaces as a spatial phenomenon is uncontested [
15,
16]. The consequences of such a struggle can lead to citizens’ discontent and dissatisfaction. Therefore, citizens may exercise their “right to the city” through various forms, including space occupation. The production of space—including the spaces produced during the revolution, like Khartoum’s sit-in—cannot be comprehended without studying its meaning, value, and activities. In this regard, the best method to understand a spatial phenomenon and experience would be to examine its process of production [
15]. Otherwise stated, space does not have a specific significance or meaning: it dictates its meaning through the activities performed by the different groups of inhabitants through their engagement in the process of space appropriation and re-appropriation. In addition, the meaning and the quality of these spaces are generated by both getting the people into space itself [
35] and benchmarking them against the rules for successful public spaces—such as those of Carmona [
33] and the PPS [
34]. Similarly, the “lived space” as deliberated by Lefebvre [
15], paired with the place attachment framework in Scannell & Gifford’s [
32] work, exhibits a people-centered approach to understand the meaning of urban space. These approaches provide a great example for recognizing the typologies, structure, and activities of political space, including Khartoum’s sit-in.
3. Aims, Objectives, and Methods
This article reflects on Khartoum’s sit-in space during the Nile Spring, exploring the public discourses, activities, and the space transformation during the sit-in period in April–May 2019. The spatialities we are trying to explain in this article are the source of several complexities in understanding revolution, public space, and politics. Hence, this article is based on a proposition of the philosopher Henri Lefebvre and his major philosophical work, “The Production of Space”, in which he interrogates whether it is “… conceivable that the exercise of hegemony might leave space untouched?” [
15]. The article is a modest attempt to react to this question, presenting the Nile Spring and the sit-in space as an example.
Through the study of the sit-in space, we aim to exhibit how the Nile Spring has, or has not, transformed the very conception of what a public space is by examining the functions of the sit-in space as a territory of political exercise. It must be noted that the analysis in this paper is grounded in four methods, including:
Direct and participant observation.
Follow-up of the sit-in space activities on various media sources, social networking sites, and digital newspapers.
Literature reviewing.
Interviews with activists, scholars, journalists, and politicians.
The observation was carried out to document both the activities and the nature of the spatial constructs erected in the sit-in space. This includes temporal constructs such as barricades, services, and infrastructure. Throughout our observation of the sit-in, we utilized three observation sampling methods, including events sampling, time sampling, and spatial sampling. For event sampling, we decided to focus on activities that involve more than five people at the moment of action. This number excludes activities that, by their nature, require two or fewer people, such as dating and commercial activities. For time sampling, the observation was carried out three times a day—in the morning, in the afternoon, and in the evening—for at least 60 min for each interval. The observation itself was carried out randomly for five consecutive days. The spatial sampling, however, was done by dividing the sit-in space into three spatial zones—the eastern zone, the central zone, and the western zone. Such division was necessary considering the remarkably large sit-in area, which measured around 27.5 hectares.
The observation sheet documents five primary constructs: the nature of the activity (temporal, active, passive); the location of the activity; who is involved in the activity (age group, gender); the goal of the activity; and the rules that govern the activity and behavior. Due to the limitations imposed by the observation technique—namely, the limited scope of the observation (five days)—the utilization of the participant observation methodology was supported by follow-ups of the sit-in daily activities as documented by the mass media and social groups. We reviewed seven documentaries and media reports about the sit-in and followed the daily post of the journalists, activists, and, most importantly, the sit-in Media Group on Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram.
A literature review was also conducted to support the theoretical and contextual aspects of the research. While the literature reviewed provided a reasonable theoretical structure, it was difficult to contextualize the research due to the lack of relevant literature on public space in Khartoum. We tried to curtail such a knowledge gap by utilizing interviews as an alternative methodology.
The interviews in this research were explored for two main purposes; to fill in the knowledge gaps about the literature on public spaces and activism in Khartoum and to support or negate the outcomes of the observation-based analysis. We utilized semi-structured interviews, which were mostly done in person and by telephone. The utilization of semi-structured interviews was justified by the lack of research on the topic. Respondents were divided into two groups. The first group included two university professors and a historian. The questions highlighted for this group concentrated on the relationship between the revolution, democracy, and the public space in Khartoum. The second group included four activists, two journalists, and two politicians. The questions raised for this group included inquiries about the nature and the role of both the activities and the spatial constructs in the sit-in. The members of this group were also requested to reflect on their experience and how they envisioned the sit-in compared to other spaces in Khartoum.
4. Sudan’s Third Revolution (2018) and Khartoum’s Sit-In Space
Throughout the three decades of al-Bashir’s dictatorship, Khartoum was progressively transformed into a fortress that exhibited the power and ideology of the governing regime [
25]. Public spaces were privatized [
24], municipal building displayed the power of the Islamist rulers [
25], and access to the free public sphere was controlled [
36]. However, spaces designed to provide the setting for showing off the architectural magnificence and the power of a government often become the very place where the public assembles to protest directly against that regime. The occupation of urban spaces directly contests the power structure by challenging the functions and symbolisms of those spaces. The sit-in space that was constructed during Sudan’s December 2018 revolution is a true manifestation of this.
The public movement against al-Bashir’s government began as early as 2018. However, it gained momentum in late 2018, when the demonstrations commenced in the city of
al-Damazin. Since then, a series of protests broke out throughout the country due to the rising costs of living and the deterioration of socio-economic conditions. The most notable event that led to the success of revolution was when the protestors decided to occupy the space in front of the
al-Qeyada (the Army headquarters), in Khartoum, forming the first mass sit-in in the country’s modern history (
Figure 1 and
Figure 2). The sit-in, which lasted for fifty-eight days before it was dispersed, fueled a series of events that led the Sudanese Army to arrest al-Bashir and take control of the government.
The occupied sit-in space is located at the geographic center of Greater Khartoum, adjacent to Khartoum’s center from the east (
Figure 3). Many of the major streets in Khartoum, such as
Obeid Khatim Street and
al-Imam al-Mahadi Street, pass right at the edges of the space, from the east and the west, respectively. The Nile Avenue is just a couple of minutes’ walk north of the sit-in. The entire occupied spaces have five main entry points, two from the east and three from the west. The total area of the sit-in space was estimated at 108 hectares (see
Figure 4). This area comprises many administrative services and educational facilities. However, the active site of the sit-in space, where most of the activities took place, was calculated to be around 27.5 hectares. It should be noted that the sit-in space has a dynamic nature. Protestors expanded the space and retracted it according to their requirements.
The area of
al-Qeyada is accessible from 15 streets, some of which extend for kilometers into the urban structure of the city. The eastern boundary of the sit-in space is the Peace Park, “
Hadaegg as-Salam”. This park is directly bordering a crossing of three primary street connections heading to Khartoum North city across the Blue Nile, to eastern Khartoum and
Burri, and to southern Khartoum through
Obeid Khatim street. The western boundary of the sit-in space is enclosed by
al-Imam al-Mahadi Street, which also leads to northern Khartoum through the famous Blue Nile Bridge. The University of Khartoum’s main campus, the University of Khartoum’s mosque, the Bankers Union, and the College of Medical and Radiologic Sciences also adjoin this side of the sit-in space. The Army headquarters demarcates the sit-in space on the south (
Figure 4). Several colonial buildings border the revolt spaces, including the students’ hostels and Khartoum University Hospital, to the north (the British Barracks before the country’s independence).
While the urban design context of
al-Qeyada does not make the sit-in space the perfect place to launch a revolution (
Figure 5), the imperative of location and the excellent accessibility makes the sit-in space one of the most appropriate meeting points for protestors. Moreover, its symbolic meaning may have brought other factors into play. The sit-in space is surrounded by three main points that demonstrate the regime’s power and control. First and foremost, the Army headquarters; second, the University of Khartoum’s mosque, to the west, which is a hallmark of the regime’s Islamist students’ activities within the University of Khartoum and other universities in the city; third, the Police Officers’ Club to the east of the sit-in space. These three spatial components might have qualified the sit-in space as a genuine contestation against the power of the regime.
6. Discussion
Democratic Public Spaces are necessary to safeguard socio-cultural reforms [
11,
44], to share knowledge [
45], information [
11], and perceptions that are indispensable to the construction of all-encompassing public social policy. The role of the streets and open spaces during the actions of the revolution showed that authentic public spaces within a city are fundamental. After the occupation of the sit-in space, its functionality was redefined by both the protestors and the process, that managed to reclaim both the space and social democracy. As the sit-in gradually transformed into a space of interventions, debates, public arts, and culture, it managed to attract various social, economic, and religious perspectives.
The sit-in fosters a civic engagement through which the occupation, creation, and appropriation of public spaces becomes a participatory workshop that involves almost everyone. Hence, the sit-in seems to have provided a new vision for the relationship between urban design, urban space, and politics. This vision is based on the departure from a political system that creates architecture and spaces to express its power, i.e.,
al-Saha Al-khadra (the Green Yard), the Army headquarters, the National Intelligence Club, toward an urban design and urban spaces that harvest and reconstruct the country’s fragile political and socio-cultural system. The activities of the sit-in (
Figure 7) involved various members of society, including youth, women, elders, religious groups, and professional associations. It also involved different social and economic classes as well as citizens that assembled from more than nine Sudanese cities [
37]. This gathering showed not only the diversity of the protestors in the sit-in but also how the socio-cultural differences—that had previously fueled the civil war in Sudan [
46]—could rebuild society starting from the sit-in space. The collective action that appropriated the sit-in reflected Harvey’s argument that the right to the city “…is not merely a right of access to what exists, but a right to change it after our heart’s desire” [
47] (p. 236). In addition, the sit-in collective occupation and transformation has satisfied Harvey’s [
16] perception of the role of urban revolution as an endeavor to transform public space into a political common; this common must be collective and non-commodified, similar to a Habermasian public sphere [
30].
The regime’s control over the public sphere and public space may have changed the domain through which protestors retrieved their right to the city. Demonstrators often called the sit-in space the “liberated land of the republic of
al-Qeyada”, to distinguish the sit-in space from other public areas in Khartoum. Such a name indirectly recognized other public spaces in Khartoum as “not free”. The streets seem to have become, therefore, the only physical space that compensated such loss of public space. Hence, the act of reclaiming the public space in Khartoum cannot be seen or understood without the December uprising. It was perhaps not a battle over spaces but a quest to prioritize the public’s demands over the regime’s interests in a way that merged the public realm with the public sphere and the public domain. The events that followed the occupation of the sit-in space progressively transformed the space from an instrument of liberation into a workshop for creating a model for an alternative society [
48]. During the sit-in, protestors turned
al-Qeyada into an interactive convention of local traditions and international waves of ideas and thoughts that were channeled through the sit-in activities and spatial constructs to the protestors. These layers of interaction between local and international thoughts fueled ideas and information exchanges. Driven by the sensation of the value of the individual and the society, the sit-in gave birth to plentiful space meaning through instant graffiti, poetry, music, songs, and, most importantly, provided the space for democratic debates and cultural exchanges among various groups, classes, and ethnicities. This spatial condition is what Lefebvre [
15] labeled as “the lived space”, which he identified as a more potent space than the “perceived spaces”. Lived space tends to interact with people’s spatial experience and to create memories. In addition, the assortment mentioned above replicates the tripartite elements of the place attachment framework, as presented by Scannell & Gifford [
32]. In other words, the sit-in space demonstrated a strong bond between protestors and space.
The fifty-eight days of the sit-in managed to launch an inclusive democratic public space and activities that can be described as:
Democratic and free, equally accessible to everyone.
Meaningful, by incorporating notable amenities and features that connected users and their daily life.
Engaging, designed with an active use.
Responsive, in that they provided spaces for discovery, activities relations, learning, and debate.
Mediator of conflicts, as they allocates spaces to many conflicting ideologies and groups to meet and discuss their points of view.
The five values above were described in critical urban design studies as fundamental for authentic public space, i.e., Carmona [
33], the Project for Public Space [
34], and Kellett [
49] (p. 97). At this point, on might ask why the sit-in space has gained this prominence and publicity while other public spaces in Khartoum simply failed. To answer this question, we need to revisit the urban design’s theoretical framework, that deals with the quality of public space and space production. Both of Carmona’s [
33] rules of successful public space and the PPS’s [
34] qualities for successful public space have been observed in the sit-in space. The sit-in was full of street life, evening uses, activities, volunteerism—and, above all, it was inclusive. Children, women, elders, wealthy, poor, Muslims, Christians, Africans, and Arabs were all observed in the sit-in space, supporting the sit-in different activities. Furthermore, the sit-in was safe, walkable, sittable, and attractive. Those four elements confidently respond to the aspects of place comfort, place accessibility, and place sociability as identified by the PPS [
34].
The two examples presented above stressed the importance of the user experience and the attachment to the public space. The connection between people and their emotional environments—often called “place attachment”—is central to both Carmona [
33] and PPS [
34]. In this regard, the sit-in space has generated a positive attachment between people and an area that was previously only a couple of parallel streets. Most of Carmona’s [
33] rules of successful public space as well as all the PPS’s [
34] principles were present at the sit-in space. In addition, the functions and activities demonstrated during the sit-in were unmatched in the modern history of Sudan’s public space. The sit-in did foster an urban sense of space, as defined by Montgomery [
50]; this was supported by the 27.5 hectares of a walkable sit-in, the spectrum of activities, and the spatial constructs exhibited in
Figure 4 and
Figure 7. In other words, the activities observed in the sit-in space reflect the vitality and the diversity of the space. The last two concepts are considered the main components of the auspicious activity [
50].
Finally, Building on Jürgen Habermas’s theories on the role of the public sphere in democratic discourses [
30], and the variety of activities exhibited in the sit-in, the occupied space has represented what Hauser [
51] called a “discursive space” and defined as a
“…space in which individuals and groups congregate to discuss matters of mutual interest and, where possible, to reach a common judgment” [
51] (p. 86). This testimony indicates that the sit-in space reflected both the public sphere and the public domain of the protestors.
7. Conclusions
This research has shown the role of activities and public discourses in a revolutionary context. The article recognized the positive role of the sit-in activities and spatial constructs both as a mechanism of space democratization and a tool of social and cultural change. The activities of the sit-in space have brought the notion of a vibrant public space to the forefront of discourses on contemporary urbanism in Khartoum, as it restored the faith in public space as an instrument of change. Besides, the manifestation of those activities in a temporal space such as the sit-in, triggered a broader array of social possibilities as well as a new culture of social accountability and engagement through the protestors’ participation in different activities.
Moreover, the sit-in activities facilitated a sort of dialogue between the spaces of tradition and modernity among activities that are unlikely to spatially co-exist [
52]. This allows us to qualify the activities of the sit-in as both “creative” and “generative”. The activities were “creative” in that they managed to provide a set of diverse social, political, cultural, economic, and artistic activities that rarely co-existed in Khartoum before the revolution. They were also “generative” in that they produced a new culture of acceptance and marriage between modernity and tradition, between local and global, between different religious and cultural groups, and between various social classes. The introduction of uncensored political activities into the public space in Khartoum, as observed in the sit-in, is also a “generative” construct of shared visions and an emerging urban phenomenon.
The sit-in space in front of al-Qeyada is perhaps the most identifiable spatial icon associated with Sudan’s third revolution—so much so that many observers have labeled the Nile Spring as the Midan al-Qeyada revolution. The al-Qeyada sit-in demonstrated that public spaces are not just vacuums or empty lands, as the majority of public spaces in Khartoum during the al-Bashir regime; instead, they are an accumulation of social, cultural, and political forces of the city, blended in a way that restores the pride and the right to public spaces. Today, it is no longer surprising to see many “non-spaces” and empty walls bombarded with socio-cultural and political activities as well as beautiful graffiti, powerfully illustrating this transformation.
Three key lessons can be learned from the spatial experience and the democratic practice and activities in the sit-in space. First and foremost, the activities of the sit-in fostered a model of place-making that showcased remarkable structures of social coherence, cultural marriage, public engagement, shared vision, and, most importantly, collective action to design, appropriate, and manage public space. The sit-in space occupation demonstrated that, regardless of the level of control and power exhibited, the public space can still become “insurgent”, as described by Hou [
7] or “loose”, as mentioned by Franck & Stevens [
53]. Either way, a genuine public space—like the sit-in space in
al-Qeyada—is a potent tool in the struggle over public space.
Secondly, while the triumph of the December 2018 revolution remains much contested, it is evident that the sit-in has challenged the very conception of the relationship between public space and political ideology through the provision of a new practical example of what a public space is. Through the utilization of activities and spatial constructs as agents of change, the sit-in succeeded in revolutionizing the understanding of what is public and how public spaces should be imagined, designed, and managed. The process of occupying the sit-in space has generated “a new meaning” for both the revolution and the space it occupied. For the first time in Sudan history, a genuine public space was produced, appropriated, and transformed in a way that contested local systems of public space production.
Finally, the al-Qeyada sit-in space disclosed the necessity to rethink current planning and urban design procedures of urban spaces and the city at large that failed to provide spaces for political and socio-cultural transformations. Such transformation can be achieved through two main formulas: democratizing access to space and democratizing the ability to produce places. Nevertheless, it is noteworthy that none of these two recipes can be realized without democratizing the state itself.
This article has reflected on Khartoum’s sit-in space during the December uprising, exploring the public discourses, activities, and the space transformation during the sit-in period. However, the case of Sudan’s uprising and its unfolding events raises a theoretical dilemma on the process of generating, appropriating, and managing public space, which will continue to dominate research and pragmatic domains for some time. The results exhibited above emphasize the role of the sit-in space and its transformation; therefore, they cannot be considered as having produced a paradigm shift in the mechanism of public space production. Nevertheless, it is crucial to question whether the sit-in space was a genuine declaration of the public rejection of public space design and planning policies, or just the result of a political exercise against a corrupt regime. Is there now a need for alternative strategies that can replicate what has happened in the al-Qeyada sit-in? How to sustain this rebirth of the image and character of the sit-in space to transform the socio-spatial configuration of Khartoum and create vibrant community spaces that exploit the sit-in’s political, social, economic, and cultural significance? What kind of interventions are required to support this social change? How to put these interventions into practice in terms of planning and policy framework? Or should the public, in Khartoum and Sudan at large, redefine their relationship to public space at the current historical juncture?