女性在城市捡垃圾的故事:“人们看着我们,好像我们疯了,但我不在乎”

Princess A. Sibanda, Kira Erwin
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摘要

全球南方城市非正式工作的性别动态已被充分记录。非正规部门的妇女通常已经因种族化和阶级定位而被边缘化,她们在父权社会中面临着可预见的工作挑战:工资更低、工作时间更长、家庭责任更多、社会保护更少,以及与工作场所有关的安全问题。在这篇文章中,我们探讨了南非德班内城女性拾荒者所面临的具体挑战。这项研究利用了8名拾荒者的人种学研究。除了这些挑战之外,叙述性数据还说明了女性拾荒者如何以及为什么在德班内城为空间和安全进行导航和谈判。我们强调妇女如何建立社会关系,作为一种缓解物质和各种安全问题的策略。这些社会关系跨越了正式的商业联系和街头关系。这些缓解战略同时是对城市工作和创新商业做法的性别反应。城市中拾荒妇女的经历表明,要想办法解决城市中与工作、性别和空间相关的歧视和排斥问题,就得靠她们自己,无论是个人还是小型集体。最后,我们借鉴了德班内城女性拾捡者的经验,提出了一些问题,即我们可以从中吸取哪些教训,以倡导更好的城市规划,主动处理城市中的性别和正义问题。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Women’s Stories of Waste Picking in the City: “People Look at Us Like We Are Mad, but I Don’t Care”
The gendered dynamics of informal work in southern cities across the globe has been well documented. Women in the informal sector, usually already marginalised through racialised and class positionalities, face predictable work challenges in patriarchal society, lower pay, longer work hours, more family responsibilities, less social protections, and safety concerns linked to workspaces. In this article, we explore the specific challenges that women waste pickers in the inner city of Durban, South Africa, experience. The study draws on ethnographic research with eight waste pickers. Beyond the challenges, the narrative data illustrates how and why women waste pickers navigate and negotiate for space and safety in the inner city of Durban. We highlight how women build social relationships as a mitigation strategy against material and varied safety concerns. These social relationships work across formal business linkages and relationships on the street. These mitigation strategies are simultaneously gendered responses to work in the city and innovative business practices. The experiences of women waste pickers in the city indicates that it is left to the women themselves, individually and in small collectives, to find ways to navigate issues of discrimination and exclusions linked to work, gender and space in the city. Ultimately, we draw on the experiences of women waste pickers in inner city Durban to ask questions about what lessons can be learnt to advocate better municipal planning that proactively deals with gender and justice in the city.
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