1st Edition

Rebel Streets and the Informal Economy Street Trade and the Law

Edited By Alison Brown Copyright 2017
268 Pages
by Routledge

266 Pages 24 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

266 Pages 24 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

Street trade is a critical and highly visible component of the informal economy, linked to global systems of exchange. Yet policy responses are dismissive and evictions commonplace. Despite being progressively marginalised from public space, street traders in the global south are engaged in spatial and political battlegrounds to reclaim space, and claim de facto property rights over their place... Read more

1. Urban informality and 'rebel streets'

Alison Brown

Part 1: 'Rebel Streets' - Law, Rights and Space in Urban Development

2. Legal Paradigms and the informal economy: pluralism, empowerment, rights or governance?

Alison Brown

3. Rights-based approaches and social injustice: a critique

Beth Watts and Suzanne Fitzpatrick

4. 'Right to the city' and the new urban order

Edésio Fernandes

5. Reclaiming space: street trading and revanchism in Latin America

Peter Mackie, Kate Swanson and Ryan Goode

6. Claiming the streets: reframing property rights for the urban informal economy

Alison Brown

7. Law and the informal economy - the WIEGO law project

Christine Bonner

Part 2: Street Trading at the Front Line

8. Claiming urban space through judicial activism − street vendors of Ahmedabad

Darshini Mahadevia and Suchita Vyas

9. Law and litigation in street trader livelihoods − Durban, South Africa

Caroline Skinner

10. Revisiting the revanchist city: the changing politics of street vending in Guangzhou

Gengzhi Huang, Desheng Xue and Zhigang Li

11. Commerce of the street in Sénégal − between illegality and tolerance

Ibrahima Dankoco and Alison Brown

12. The politics and regulation of street trading in Dar es Salaam

Colman Msoka and Tulia Ackson

13. Street trade in post-Arab spring Tunisia − transition and the law

Annali Kristiansen, Alison Brown and Fatma Raâch

14. Street traders in post-revolution Cairo − victims or villains

Nezar Kafafy

Part 3: Claiming 'Rebel Streets'

15. Emerging themes for the new legal order

Alison Brown

Biography

Alison Brown is Professor of Urban Planning and International Development in the School of Geography and Planning, Cardiff University, UK. She is an urban planner, whose research focuses on urbanization and development policy, local governance and urban law, livelihoods, the urban informal economy and post-conflict cities, and she has published widely on the informal economy and rights-based approaches to development. She was Principal Investigator on the research project Making Space for the Poor: Law, Rights, Regulation and Street-Trade in the 21st Century, funded by the Economic and Social Research Council (ESRC)/Department for International Development (DFID) Joint Fund for Poverty Alleviation Research, reported in this book. She was an expert adviser to Habitat III, the UN Conference on Housing and Sustainable Urban Development (as a member of Policy Unit 1 on the Right to the City and Cities for All) and has written specialist development Topic Guides for DFID on planning for sustainable cities in the global south and livelihoods and urbanisation. She is a board member of the NGO Reall (formerly Homeless International) and planning adviser to the global network WIEGO (Women in Informal Employment: Globalizing and Organizing).