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Working It Out

Labour Geographies of the Poor in Soweto, South Africa

Article image

Richard Grant

01 September 2010

English

Township Studies Librarian Two

Journal article

Township Studies Group

Africa

Local economic development (LED) research and policy grapple with the informal economy and township transformation. While most current thinking centres on firms, this paper argues that non-firm worlds of work and their spatiality are not adequately understood. Representations of the places where poor people work remain abstract and incomplete. The paper reports on a survey of 320 low-income Sowetan residents and in-depth interviews with 20 workers about their work roles in the urban space economy. The findings, which show poor workers engaging with diverse sectors and locations in complex ways, challenge the dominant spatial narratives about isolated poor residential areas. Poor workers deliberately create their own social capital in work realms. This being the case, a more finely tuned conceptualisation of these workers and their roles in urban space is essential to sharpen LED discussions so that policies can be based more on real rather than imagined spatiality.

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Built environment

Economics

Human settlements

Informal sector

Livelihoods

Local economic development

Poverty & inequality

South Africa

Township

Township Studies Group

Township economies

Urban

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