Skip navigation

Journal article

Negotiated economic opportunity and power: perspectives and perceptions of street vending in urban Malawi.

English
25
0

Attachments [ 0 ]

There are no files associated with this item.

More Details

AUC Library
CODESRIA
Africa | Southern Africa
0850-3907

It is least acknowledged in daily discourses that street vending is a very important phenomenon. Little wonder that street vending involves negotiating for space in all its manifestations: physical space, economic opportunity and power. The vendors are coerced by both local urban and national authorities and sometimes the public art large to justify or negotiate acceptance. Very often such intentions are blind to the most basic and yet fundamental aspect that street vending is a pragmatic grassroots response to bleak socio-economic and changing political realities that have not of late spared anyone. Street vending appears in all fairness a means to legitimate ends. Hence, access to vending spaces should be perceived as a human rights issue. Otherwise, intentions to the contrary overlook the needs and capacity of street vendors to communicate, reorient and police each other in various and meaningful ways. Any discussion of the place of street vending in the urban economy of Malawi...

Comments

(Leave your comments here about this item.)

Item Analytics

Select desired time period