EXPLORING THE DYNAMICS OF STREET TRADING AS STREET SPATIAL (IN) JUSTICE IN MUSINA TOWN

W. Tsoriyo, E. Ingwani
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Abstract

Street trading takes place on the most contested public spaces-streets. Street spaces are therefore sites of spatial justice and injustice and consequently inclusion and exclusion. This paper explores the dynamics of street trading as street spatial (in)justice in Musina Town. The study adopts a qualitative research approach. Data were collected in the form of structured interviews with Musina Local Municipality officials and semi-structured interviews with 30 street traders from Musina Town CBD. The key findings reveal that issuing of trading licenses is a controlled form of spatial justice, which limits the expansion of street trade and confines the traders to a particular space. The findings reveal that the ‘‘Right to the City’’ claims depend on the users’ purpose for being in the street. Understanding the street trading dynamics and nature of space contestations and negotiations by street traders’ and other street users helps planners to delineate their implications on street spatial justice and stimulates the creation of new innovative approaches to co-create more inclusive and just spaces with street traders as co-producers of spatially (un)just street spaces.
探索街头交易作为街道空间正义在musina镇的动态
街头交易发生在最有争议的公共空间——街道上。因此,街道空间是空间正义和不公正的场所,因此是包容和排斥。本文探讨了Musina镇街头交易作为街道空间正义的动态。本研究采用定性研究方法。数据以与穆西纳当地市政官员的结构化访谈和对穆西纳镇CBD的30名街头小贩的半结构化访谈的形式收集。主要发现表明,发放交易许可证是一种受控制的空间正义形式,它限制了街头贸易的扩张,并将交易者限制在特定的空间内。调查结果显示,“城市权利”的主张取决于使用者在街上的目的。了解街头交易的动态以及街头商贩和其他街道使用者之间的空间竞争和谈判的性质,有助于规划者描绘他们对街道空间正义的影响,并激发新的创新方法的创造,与街头商贩作为空间(非)公平的街道空间的共同生产者共同创造更具包容性和公正的空间。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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