1982
DOI: 10.1111/j.1467-9663.1982.tb00962.x
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Getting by in the ‘Informal Sector’ of Soweto

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Cited by 21 publications
(4 citation statements)
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“…As spatial economic planning products, they were designed to eliminate economic opportunities for nonwhites. Their origins as nongenerative economic spaces pushed informal businesses (e.g., carpentry, refurbishment, clothing manufacturing) under the radar (Rogerson and Beavon, 1982;Webster, 1984), and the loosening of apartheid policies led to their further dispersal. The stubborn cartography of apartheid limited the development of a local spatial economy and in fact perpetuated spatial-economy disconnection between "black" townships and the "white city."…”
Section: Entrepreneurship and Informal Economic Space In Sowetomentioning
confidence: 99%
“…As spatial economic planning products, they were designed to eliminate economic opportunities for nonwhites. Their origins as nongenerative economic spaces pushed informal businesses (e.g., carpentry, refurbishment, clothing manufacturing) under the radar (Rogerson and Beavon, 1982;Webster, 1984), and the loosening of apartheid policies led to their further dispersal. The stubborn cartography of apartheid limited the development of a local spatial economy and in fact perpetuated spatial-economy disconnection between "black" townships and the "white city."…”
Section: Entrepreneurship and Informal Economic Space In Sowetomentioning
confidence: 99%
“…These include writings on grocery retail outlets (spaza shops) (Ligthelm 2005;Charman & Piper 2013), liquor retailers (Charman, Herrick & Petersen 2014;Rogerson & Beavon 1982), traditional healers ) and township tourism enterprises (Nemasetoni & Rogerson 2005) to list four examples. Research on street traders, in contrast, has predominately investigated urban inner-city informal markets and central business district localities (see BenitGbaffou 2015;Skinner 2008).…”
Section: Literature Reviewmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The Orlando Ekhaya development has made provision for offices but it remains to be seen what the take-up will be. The informal sector provides a livelihood cushion for many of Soweto's poorest but also remains relatively undeveloped with most activity in low-order retail, although there has been some expansion into areas like tourism (Rogerson 2008).…”
Section: Private Investment In the Shaping Of Sowetomentioning
confidence: 99%