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Book
Cheap street
Author:
ISBN: 1526146789 1526131706 9781526131706 9781526146786 0719099226 9780719099229 1526131714 9781526131713 Year: 2019 Publisher: Manchester

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Abstract

From around 1850, London's street markets grew in number and scale, giving working-class Londoners a site for shopping, entertainment and sociability. Cheap Street is the first major study of this subject, analysing the street markets as a component of London's lively informal economy, and providing new insights into urban and consumer geographies.


Book
Street democracy
Author:
ISBN: 1496200012 1496200039 9781496200013 9781496200037 9780803275034 080327503X 9780803269712 0803269714 9781496200020 Year: 2017 Publisher: Lincoln


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Tanzania's informal economy : the micro-politics of street vending
Author:
ISBN: 1786994526 9781786994523 9781786994509 9781786994530 9781786994547 178699450X 1350222852 1786994534 1786994542 9781350222854 Year: 2019 Publisher: London, England : [London, England] : Zed Books, Bloomsbury Publishing,


Book
The slow boil
Author:
ISBN: 9780804799393 0804799393 9780804798228 0804798222 9780804799379 0804799377 Year: 2016 Publisher: Stanford, California

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Abstract

Street food vendors are both a symbol and a scourge of Mumbai: cheap roadside snacks are enjoyed by all, but the people who make them dance on a razor's edge of legality. While neighborhood associations want the vendors off cluttered sidewalks, many Mumbaikers appreciate the convenient bargains they offer. In The Slow Boil, Jonathan Shapiro Anjaria draws on his long-term fieldwork with these vendors to make sense of the paradoxes within the city and, thus, to create a better understanding of urban space in general. Much urban studies literature paints street vendors either as oppressed and marginalized victims or as inventive premoderns. In contrast, Anjaria acknowledges that diverse political, economic, historic, and symbolic processes create contradictions in the vendors' everyday lives, like their illegality and proximity to the state, and their insecurity and permanence. Mumbai's disorderly sidewalks reflect the simmering tensions over livelihood, democracy, and rights that are central to the city but have long been overlooked. In The Slow Boil, these issues are not subsumed into a larger framework, but are explored on their own terms"--

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