"In this book you will meet the world's most oppressed people and converse in a reflective cross-disciplinary way about their modes of life, their vulnerability and their resilience. Kudos for James Staples and his team who have brought these lives to light and created the best sort of policy relevant research." -Barbara Harriss-White, Oxford University "Here are fine-grained accounts of survival strategies on the very margins of poor societies. A new generation of anthropologists and development planners bear witness to the resilience and resourcefulness of some of the most impoverished people in the world. Anyone who wants to understand, and to help, should read this book." -Adam Kuper, Brunel University

Sex workers, street hawkers, drug sellers, cleaners—they are people living on the margins of urban life who are ubiquitous but widely misunderstood and notably absent from mainstream economic analyses. In Livelihood on the Margins, anthropologists and practitioners engaged in hands-on development work use fine-grained ethnographic research to cut through the conventional narratives that romanticize, victimize, or demonize these populations. They go beyond the trendy “sustainable livelihoods” approach to development to examine the relationship between the agency people can actually wield over their own lives and the broader socio-political constraints that persistently push them to the margins. Making these multi-level connections across a wide range of world regions and situations, this volume shows how the micro-concerns of ordinary people might usefully guide the macro-concerns of governments, NGOs, and global institutions who are engineering large-scale social and economic development programs. Livelihood at the Margins is an engaging and eye-opening read for undergraduate and graduate students studying development in anthropology, sociology, geography, economics, and other disciplines, as well as a useful tool for developments studies researchers and practitioners.
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Sex workers, street hawkers, drug sellers, cleaners - they are people living on the margins of urban life who are ubiquitous but widely misunderstood and notably absent from mainstream economic analyses. This book uses ethnographic research to cut through the conventional narratives that romanticize, victimize, or demonize these populations.
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Preface; Chapter 1 Introduction: Livelihoods at the Margins, James Staples; Chapter 2 No Money, No Life: Surviving on the Streets of Kampala, Stan Frankland; Chapter 3 Embodying Oppression: Revolta amongst Young People Living on the Streets of Rio de Janeiro, Udi Butler; Chapter 4 Children on the Streets of Dhaka and their Coping Strategies, Alessandro Conticini; Chapter 5 Hindu Nationalism and Failing Development Goals: Micro-Finance, Women and Illegal Livelihoods in the Bombay Slums, Atreyee Sen; Chapter 6 Keeping it Clean: Discipline, Control and Everyday Politics in a Bangkok Shopping Mall, Alyson Brody; Chapter 7 Fast Money in the Margins: Migrants in the Sex Industry, Laura María Agustín; Chapter 8 Begging Questions: Leprosy and Alms Collection in Mumbai, James Staples; Chapter 9 Vulnerable in the City: Adivasi Seasonal Labour Migrants in western India, David Mosse, Sanjeev Gupta, Vidya Shah; Chapter 10 ‘Moving Up and Down Looking for Money’: Making a Living in a Ugandan Refugee Camp, Tania Kaiser; Chapter 11 ‘In-betweenness’ on the Margins: Collective Organisation, Ethnicity and Political Agency among Bolivian Street Traders, Sian Lazar;
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Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9781598742725
Publisert
2007-08-15
Utgiver
Left Coast Press Inc; Left Coast Press Inc
Vekt
476 gr
Høyde
229 mm
Bredde
152 mm
Aldersnivå
U, 05
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Innbundet
Antall sider
272

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Om bidragsyterne

James Staples is a British Academy research fellow in Social Anthropology at the School of Oriental and African Studies, University of London.