At the fringes of the city of Ulaanbaatar, Mongolia, the land and its people are undergoing a process of becoming urban. This represents a fundamental shift from generations of nomadic, pastoral living toward a sedentary, urban culture. In this process, inhabitants are faced with new sets of adjustments that, as nomads, they never had to address. As nomads, they typically clustered in family groups, far away from others to prevent their herds from mixing. In the city, they live in proximity to strangers, leading to new shared responsibilities beyond their own family. Ownership and the demarcation of land requires negotiation on borders, levels of control, and the articulation of private, semi-public, and public territory. The placement of infrastructure such as pit-latrines and electric cables affects others, and so the pragmatics…