Making Life Liveable in an Informal Market

Q1 Social Sciences
Nomkhosi Mbatha, Leah Koskimaki
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

African migrants working in street trading business in Durban, South Africa often face xenophobia and must navigate policies regulating the informal economy. However, they sustain livelihoods in urban markets through building friendships while maintaining transnational connections back home. Based on qualitative research conducted in 2019 and 2021 with thirty street traders from Senegal, The Gambia, Nigeria, and Malawi at the Workshop Flea Market in Durban, the article interrogates the way in which friendship and conviviality emerge in informal market spaces. Building on AbdouMaliq Simone's concept of “people as infrastructure,” we show how migrant street traders in the Workshop Market invest in the urban collective, while locally and transnationally connected through economic and affective exchanges.
让非正式市场的生活更宜居
在南非德班从事街头贸易的非洲移民经常面临仇外心理,必须应对监管非正规经济的政策。然而,他们通过建立友谊,同时在国内保持跨国联系,在城市市场维持生计。基于2019年和2021年在德班工作坊跳蚤市场对来自塞内加尔、冈比亚、尼日利亚和马拉维的30名街头小贩进行的定性研究,本文探讨了友谊和欢乐在非正式市场空间中出现的方式。以AbdouMaliq Simone的“人即基础设施”概念为基础,我们展示了工作坊市场的流动街头商贩如何投资于城市集体,同时通过经济和情感交流在本地和跨国之间建立联系。
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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来源期刊
CiteScore
3.60
自引率
0.00%
发文量
17
审稿时长
40 weeks
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