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De camelôs a lojistas : etnografia da transição do mercado de rua para um shopping popular em Porto Alegre-RSKopper, Moisés January 2012 (has links)
Esta dissertação parte das tensões envolvidas no processo de remoção do mercado de rua do centro de Porto Alegre/RS e sua realocação para um shopping popular. O “camelódromo”, como ficou conhecido o edifício que abriga mais de 800 lojas – de aproximadamente 4m² –, foi realizado em tempo recorde graças a uma Parceria Público Privada (PPP), a primeira do gênero em Porto Alegre e uma das pioneiras no Brasil. A dissertação privilegia a abordagem etnográfica, baseada numa inserção de campo de mais de três anos, o que permitiu captar o processo em perspectiva diacrônica. A observação participante – acrescida de outras técnicas, como entrevistas em profundidade e surveys – teve como ponto de partida um dos principais grupos de camelôs envolvidos na transição. Este grupo, inicialmente otimista em relação à transição, foi preterido na disputa pelos melhores espaços no camelódromo e reagiu com uma série de mobilizações. Foram acionadas diversas instituições políticas, tais como a Câmara Municipal, o Ministério Público, a Prefeitura, e o Orçamento Participativo, entre outras. Esta estratégia mostrou-se ineficiente e culminou com o despejo de vários lojistas inadimplentes – entre eles o principal líder do grupo –, e a dissipação da mobilização coletiva. No entanto, as tensões não cessaram, pois a transição das ruas para o camelódromo foi acompanhada de perto pela empresa, que exigiu uma mudança na sensibilidade comercial, a partir de uma política de pedagogização visando forjar um novo perfil de comerciante, indispensável ao sucesso econômico do empreendimento. Novas modalidades de conflitos emergiram dessa estratégia, pois nem todos os camelôs se reconverteram no protótipo de lojista idealizado pela PPP. As tensões em torno desse processo criaram um cenário propício para uma investigação que se preocupa em reconstituir etnograficamente os nexos entre a economia e a política, o objetivo e o subjetivo, o micro e o macro, a cidade e os cidadãos, a diversidade de agentes e de agências que caracterizam uma dada configuração social e cultural. / This dissertation starts with the tensions involved in the removal of the street market in downtown Porto Alegre/RS and its relocation to a popular mall. The “camelódromo”, as the building – which houses more than 800 stands of roughly four square meters – became known, was accomplished in record time thanks to a Public-Private Partnership (PPP), the first of its kind in Porto Alegre and one of the first in Brazil. The dissertation relies on the ethnographic approach, based on a field insertion of more than three years, which allowed capturing the process in a diachronic perspective. The participant observation – plus other techniques such as interviews and surveys – had as its starting point a major group of vendors involved in the transition. This group, initially optimistic about the transition, was passed over in the race for the best spaces in the camelódromo, and reacted with a series of mobilizations. Several political institutions were called upon, such as the City Council, the Prosecutor, the City Hall, and the Participatory Budget, among others. This strategy proved itself ineffective, and resulted in the eviction of several defaulting tenants – including the main leader of the group – and the dissipation of the collective mobilization. However, the tensions didn’t cease, as the transition from the streets to the camelódromo was closely monitored by the company, which required a change in the commercial sensitivity, based on a pedagogization policy aimed to forge a new trader profile, essential to the economic success of the enterprise. New modalities of conflict arose from this strategy, because not all vendors reconverted themselves into the prototype designed by the PPP. The tensions around this process created a favorable environment for a research that tries to retrace ethnographically the connections between economics and politics, the objective and the subjective, the micro and the macro, the city and the citizens, the diversity of agents and agencies that characterize a given social and cultural setting.
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De camelôs a lojistas : etnografia da transição do mercado de rua para um shopping popular em Porto Alegre-RSKopper, Moisés January 2012 (has links)
Esta dissertação parte das tensões envolvidas no processo de remoção do mercado de rua do centro de Porto Alegre/RS e sua realocação para um shopping popular. O “camelódromo”, como ficou conhecido o edifício que abriga mais de 800 lojas – de aproximadamente 4m² –, foi realizado em tempo recorde graças a uma Parceria Público Privada (PPP), a primeira do gênero em Porto Alegre e uma das pioneiras no Brasil. A dissertação privilegia a abordagem etnográfica, baseada numa inserção de campo de mais de três anos, o que permitiu captar o processo em perspectiva diacrônica. A observação participante – acrescida de outras técnicas, como entrevistas em profundidade e surveys – teve como ponto de partida um dos principais grupos de camelôs envolvidos na transição. Este grupo, inicialmente otimista em relação à transição, foi preterido na disputa pelos melhores espaços no camelódromo e reagiu com uma série de mobilizações. Foram acionadas diversas instituições políticas, tais como a Câmara Municipal, o Ministério Público, a Prefeitura, e o Orçamento Participativo, entre outras. Esta estratégia mostrou-se ineficiente e culminou com o despejo de vários lojistas inadimplentes – entre eles o principal líder do grupo –, e a dissipação da mobilização coletiva. No entanto, as tensões não cessaram, pois a transição das ruas para o camelódromo foi acompanhada de perto pela empresa, que exigiu uma mudança na sensibilidade comercial, a partir de uma política de pedagogização visando forjar um novo perfil de comerciante, indispensável ao sucesso econômico do empreendimento. Novas modalidades de conflitos emergiram dessa estratégia, pois nem todos os camelôs se reconverteram no protótipo de lojista idealizado pela PPP. As tensões em torno desse processo criaram um cenário propício para uma investigação que se preocupa em reconstituir etnograficamente os nexos entre a economia e a política, o objetivo e o subjetivo, o micro e o macro, a cidade e os cidadãos, a diversidade de agentes e de agências que caracterizam uma dada configuração social e cultural. / This dissertation starts with the tensions involved in the removal of the street market in downtown Porto Alegre/RS and its relocation to a popular mall. The “camelódromo”, as the building – which houses more than 800 stands of roughly four square meters – became known, was accomplished in record time thanks to a Public-Private Partnership (PPP), the first of its kind in Porto Alegre and one of the first in Brazil. The dissertation relies on the ethnographic approach, based on a field insertion of more than three years, which allowed capturing the process in a diachronic perspective. The participant observation – plus other techniques such as interviews and surveys – had as its starting point a major group of vendors involved in the transition. This group, initially optimistic about the transition, was passed over in the race for the best spaces in the camelódromo, and reacted with a series of mobilizations. Several political institutions were called upon, such as the City Council, the Prosecutor, the City Hall, and the Participatory Budget, among others. This strategy proved itself ineffective, and resulted in the eviction of several defaulting tenants – including the main leader of the group – and the dissipation of the collective mobilization. However, the tensions didn’t cease, as the transition from the streets to the camelódromo was closely monitored by the company, which required a change in the commercial sensitivity, based on a pedagogization policy aimed to forge a new trader profile, essential to the economic success of the enterprise. New modalities of conflict arose from this strategy, because not all vendors reconverted themselves into the prototype designed by the PPP. The tensions around this process created a favorable environment for a research that tries to retrace ethnographically the connections between economics and politics, the objective and the subjective, the micro and the macro, the city and the citizens, the diversity of agents and agencies that characterize a given social and cultural setting.
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Espacialização do trabalho ambulante de Lagoa da Prata (MG): velhas práticas, novos arranjos / Spatialization labor walking of Silver Lagon (MG): old practices new arregementsMorais, Valéria Aparecida de Castro 02 July 2014 (has links)
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Previous issue date: 2014-07-02 / Coordenação de Aperfeiçoamento de Pessoal de Nível Superior - CAPES / The world experience in the newest contemporary capitalist production model, the vaunted productive
capital restructuring, which began in Brazil in the 1990. A characterized model by processes of
flexibility in the production process and the acquisition of workforce. In this context, outsourcing is
considered by many researchers, the leader of the precariousness of work and that is present in public
and private companies. Added to outsourcing processes, we have employment contracts part time,
temporary services, subcontracts, it also occurs a growth in unemployment and the out of rules of the
working class. In this context, rights and guarantees conquered by the employee through historical
struggles are being lost. Thus it broadens the informality, where many workers have sought livelyhoods.
Informal, several times workers are marginalized and desprovided of any labor rights. From the
perspective of understanding the informality, the survey's purpose is to understand the dynamics of the
informal work done by street vendors of Lagoa da Prata (MG) and then check to what extent the
precariousness is present in this activity. The methodological procedures used in the research were:
literature searches and readings of theses and dissertations; field research guided by observations,
records in field diaries, questionnaires and semi-structured interviews directed to street vendors and old
residents of Lagoa da Prata (MG). The theoretical study was given up based on Marx (1983), Alves
(2005, 2007), Thomaz Júnior (2009), Antunes (1992, 1997, 1999, 2002), Milton Santos (1979, 1985,
1996), among others. The results of the data collected from interviews in the fieldwork are exposed in
the second and third sections of this research. In the third chapter it is shown that the informal work
done by vendors of Lagoa da Prata (MG) is permeated by insecurity in labor relations and that
informality appears as employment option for many workers, and has its has worked, including
playback capital. Among others, the research shows that production held in Lagoa da Prata intendes to
supply the informal trade is driven by the work done by street vendors and raffles placers. With the
analyzes woven in this research is expected to contribute to the understanding of the changes to the
working world, especially for those who make up the informal labor market. / O mundo vivencia o mais novo modelo produtivo capitalista, a propalada reestruturação produtiva do
capital, iniciada no Brasil na década de 1990. Um modelo caracterizado pela flexibilidade no processo
produtivo e aquisição de força de trabalho. Nesse contexto, ocorre a terceirização, considerada por
muitos pesquisadores, o carro chefe da precarização do trabalho e que está presente em empresas
públicas e privadas. Somados aos processos de terceirização, tem-se os contratos de trabalho part time,
serviços temporários, subcontratações, além da ampliação do desemprego e a desregulamentação da
classe trabalhadora. Nesta conjuntura, direitos e garantias conquistadas pelo trabalhador por meio de
lutas históricas estão sendo perdidos. Assim, uma vez que muitos trabalhadores têm buscado meios de
sobrevivência, amplia-se a informalidade, na qual encontram-se marginalizados e despossuídos de
quaisquer direitos trabalhistas. Na perspectiva da compreensão da informalidade, esta pesquisa teve por
objetivo entender a dinâmica do trabalho informal realizado pelos vendedores ambulantes de Lagoa da
Prata (MG) e, em seguida, verificar em que medida a precarização está presente nessa atividade. Os
procedimentos metodológicos utilizados foram: pesquisas bibliográficas e leituras de teses e
dissertações; pesquisas de campo pautadas em observações, registros em diário de campo, aplicação de
questionários e entrevistas semiestruturadas direcionadas aos vendedores ambulantes e antigos
moradores de Lagoa da Prata (MG). O aprofundamento teórico deu-se com amparo em Marx (1983),
Alves (2005; 2007), Thomaz Júnior (2009), Antunes (1992; 1997; 1999; 2002), Milton Santos (1979;
1985; 1996), dentre outros. Os resultados dos dados e entrevistas coletadas em trabalho de campo foram
expostos na segunda e terceira seção da presente pesquisa. No terceiro capítulo fica evidenciado que o
trabalho informal realizado pelos vendedores de Lagoa da Prata (MG) é permeado pela precarização nas
relações de trabalho e a informalidade comparece como opção de emprego para muitos trabalhadores,
tendo sua funcionalidade prioritariamente para a reprodução do capital. Entre outros aspectos, a
pesquisa apontou que a produção realizada nas fábricas de Lagoa da Prata e destinada ao abastecimento
do comércio informal é impulsionada pelo trabalho feito por vendedores ambulantes e colocadores de
rifas. Com as análises tecidas nesta pesquisa espera-se contribuir para o entendimento das alterações
apresentadas no mundo do trabalho, principalmente, para aqueles que compõem o mercado de trabalho
informal.
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Understanding livelihood strategies of urban women traders : a case of Magaba, Harare in ZimbabweChirau, Takunda John January 2013 (has links)
This thesis seeks to understand and analyze the livelihood strategies of urban women traders at Magaba in Harare (Zimbabwe) in the context of the contemporary economic and political crisis. The crisis emerged in the 1990s with the introduction of a structural adjustment programme and deepened further with the fast track land reform programme initiated by the Zimbabwean government in the year 2000. The crisis has involved a down-sizing of the Zimbabwean economy and a massive rise in the rate of unemployment in the formal economy. Consequently urban life became increasingly unbearable for poor blacks and informal economic activities blossomed and started to make a significant contribution to household income and livelihoods. The role of women in the informal economy was particularly pronounced. Theoretically, the thesis is underpinned by the sustainable livelihoods framework. In examining the vulnerability context of the Magaba women traders and the institutional interventions which complicate the lives and livelihoods of these traders, I identify and unpack their diverse livelihood activities and strategies and the resources (or assets) they deploy in constructing urban livelihoods. Though their livelihood portfolios complement any earnings from formal employment by household members and though they contribute to their household’s sustenance, there are a number of daily challenges which they face in their trading activities and which they seek to counteract through a range of often ingenious coping mechanisms. The thesis is important for a number of reasons. It fills an important empirical gap in the study of Magaba market specifically, it brings to the fore the gendered character of the informal trading activities in urban Zimbabwe, and it deploys the livelihoods framework in a manner which is sensitive to both structure and agency.
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How female street vendors in Nelson Mandela Bay are organizedTyida, Vuyokazi Andisiwe January 2012 (has links)
As one of the most impoverished provinces in South Africa with a high unemployment rate the Eastern Cape (Stats SA, 2011) was more suited for a study of this nature. In executing the research aims and objectives the study will be limited to focus specifically on one of the provinces cities, the Nelson Mandela Bay. The investigation will be focused on women street vendors mainly trading with fruits and vegetables, as well as other perishables. This industry was chosen because according to the Labour Force Survey (2000), there was an estimated 500,000 street traders operating in South Africa and more than 70 percent of them were found to be dealing in the trade of food items (Motala, 2002). The focus on women was driven by mainly by the fact that they constitute a majority of the street traders that are involed in the sale perishables/food items (Skinner, 2008).
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An assessment of coping strategies in the marketing of produce by street vendorsMunzhelele, R 30 January 2015 (has links)
Department of Agricultural Economics and Agribusiness / MSCAEC
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Hedonic price analysis of tomatoes sold by hawkers in the Vhembe District of Limpopo Province, South AfricaSigidi, Khumbudzo Zelda 18 May 2017 (has links)
MSCAGR (Agricultural Economics) / Department of Agricultural Economics and Agribusiness / study aimed to determine factors that influenced the price of tomatoes sold by hawkers on the roadside market. The study also aimed at determining whether any socio-economic characteristics of hawkers who sold tomatoes had significant impact on the price paid my consumers. The study was conducted in the Thulamela local municipality under Vhembe District of Limpopo, South Africa. A stratified random sampling technique was used to select participants for this study. A sample size of 198 hawkers were drawn randomly. Structured questionnaires were administered through face-to-face interview. Descriptive statistics, correlation matrix, multiple linear hedonic regression and stepwise linear regression were used to analyse collected data. With regards socio-economic characteristics, only age was found to have significant impact on the market price received by hawkers. Smooth appearance, rough appearance, round shape, oval shape, and red and yellow colour tomatoes had a significant impact on the average market price. It is therefore recommended that attribute such appearances, colour, shapes and sizes of tomatoes should be considered when selling tomatoes at both retail and farm level. This will result in more purchase of tomatoes that will eventually contribute to increase in household income and reduction in poverty.
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Food safety and hygiene practices of streed food vendors at gate two vending site at the University of Limpopo, Turfloop Campus, South AfricaTleane, Ditsebe Marcia Rosina January 2020 (has links)
Thesis (MPH.) -- University of Limpopo, 2020 / Background: Street food vending has become a common means of providing
traditional, known and convenient meals to communal eating. It has also become a
growing portent as a means of job creation and as a survival mechanism to many
affected by job creation decline. Suggestion: There is an influx of food vendors at Gate
2 of the University of Limpopo and there is a need to investigate both the hygiene and
safety measures taken by the vendors and the environment they operate in.
Methods: The purpose of the study was to observe and identify food safety and
hygiene practices by the street vendors. An observational descriptive cross sectional
study design and a convenience sampling technique were used as research designs
and sampling methods. A questionnaire on food safety and hygiene was used to
collect data.
Results: The study revealed that all of the street vendors have no form of food safety
and hygiene training. The vendors also highlighted the fact that over and above them
having no food safety and hygiene knowledge, food safety and hygiene practices such
as washing of hands frequently cannot be adhered to because of the time limitations
they have to prepare and be ready for customers as quickly as possible. The vendors
practise a mixed storage of raw and cooked food in the refrigerators within the
refrigerators. Only 30% of the vendors wear protective hand gloves while preparing
food. They have running water in the bathroom and on the premises but no soap is
provided in the bathroom for hand washing.
Conclusion: Even though street food is increasingly gaining popularity and
accessibility based on affordability, traditional meals served and accessibility, food
safety and hygiene still are a concern and a matter of alarm.
Key words: food safety and hygiene, street food vendor, food poisoning, health
hazards
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Can Tanker Water Services Contribute to Sustainable Access to Water?: A Systematic Review of Case Studies in Urban AreasZozmann, Heinrich, Morgan, Alexander, Klassert, Christian, Klauer, Bernd, Gawel, Erik 16 May 2024 (has links)
Tanker water markets (TWM) supply water services in many urban areas, including those
unconnected to public infrastructures. Notwithstanding, they have been associated with outcomes in
conflict with sustainability goals of water policy, e.g., through inequitable and unaffordable supply
or by contributing to groundwater overexploitation. So far, the literature dedicated to TWM has
primarily conducted case studies embedded in diverse local contexts, which impedes the comparison
and transfer of insights. In this article, we systematically summarize existing empirical knowledge on
TWM and assess to what extent normative claims about the impacts of TWM on sustainability goals
are supported by evidence. We use the concept of sustainable access, which combines notions of
what constitutes access to water and what characterizes sustainable supply of services. The available
evidence suggests that TWM have two key functions in urban water systems: (1) They provide
services at otherwise unavailable levels, particularly with respect to the temporal availability and
spatial accessibility of the service, and (2) they extend access to areas without or with low-quality
network supply, typically low-income communities on the fringe of cities. From the perspective of
sustainable access, we find that TWM can provide high service levels and thus fill a specific gap in
the landscape of urban water services. Due to comparatively high prices, however, it is unlikely that
these services are affordable for all. The combination of heterogeneous access to cheaper (subsidized)
piped water and marginal pricing in TWM results in allocation outcomes that are not coherent with
existing notions of equitable access to water. However, there is little convincing evidence that TWM
necessarily result in unsustainable water use. The literature indicates that urban water governance in
the studied areas is frequently characterized by a lack of effective institutions, which impedes the
regulation or formalization of TWM.
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Temporalities of water vending : Identifying agencies in the everyday governance of water provision in Mathare, Kenya.Dufour, Tara Virgile January 2024 (has links)
Mathare as an informal settlement of the Global South which suffers from an inconsistent water supply and periods of scarcity, relies for its provision on water vendors. This dissertation strives to advance scholarly debates on understanding the production and governance of the ‘actual water supply’ beyond and in relation to the centralised piped water network, and to thinking the conditions for possible change to modes of water supply. An empirical investigation was conducted on certain temporalities of change and continuity in the relational practices of governance actors of the water provision, the water vendors, situated in the informal settlement of Mathare in Nairobi, Kenya. As such, experiences of water scarcity among the water vendors are suggested to contribute to shape Mathare’s water provision by motivating practices circulation, especially regarding water storage. The water vendors might also crucially sustain and re-configure rules, interact with, and be affected by artefacts involved in the water infrastructure through practices of maintenance, repair, but also decay through temporary events of water infrastructure disruption. In turn, looking at relations shaping the water governance, stable relations are suggested to be re-produced through ‘twilight’ actors and temporal modalities in the water infrastructure.
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