2021
DOI: 10.1111/var.12239
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Non fi daffa métti

Abstract: In Dakar, Senegal, skilled tradesmen must navigate boom‐and‐bust cycles of the economy—tempos disproportionately influenced by the Islamic calendar, foreign investment, and an individual’s access to social capital. Anticipating these cycles, drawing on community networks for support, and learning to weather the bad times can mean the difference between providing for your family and having your masculinity questioned. Both Dakar and its builders are always under construction, ever in progress.

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“…Wages are low and employment can be difficult to find, so for the working-class men who participated in this research (and who make up the vast majority of the Senegalese population), finding money consumes a great deal of time and effort. It can involve working multiple jobs and one-offs, often in dangerous manual labor (with little or no worker protections), as well as calling expatriated relatives in Europe or North America to seek financial assistance [24].…”
Section: Financial Supportmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Wages are low and employment can be difficult to find, so for the working-class men who participated in this research (and who make up the vast majority of the Senegalese population), finding money consumes a great deal of time and effort. It can involve working multiple jobs and one-offs, often in dangerous manual labor (with little or no worker protections), as well as calling expatriated relatives in Europe or North America to seek financial assistance [24].…”
Section: Financial Supportmentioning
confidence: 99%