This article combines the concept of a “popular economy” with that of a “niche economy” to analyse the workings of a central bus station in Accra, Ghana, and, by extension, of Ghana's public transport sector at large. In doing so it departs from generic models of the “informal sector” commonly used for describing road and roadside entrepreneurship in African contexts. At the same time, it challenges prevalent views of popular economies bent on emphasising mechanisms of reciprocity and solidarity over opportunity and profiteering. The focus on the station, it suggests, provides for a detailed reflection on the dialectics of collaboration and competition characteristic of Ghana's local transport economics, and it offers significant continuiti...
This thesis re-evaluates the relationship between formal and informal work in third world cities. Un...
This paper investigates the ways in which linkages between the informal and formal segments of an ec...
It is estimated that around 90% of Ghana’s workforce is active in the informal economy. The immense ...
Dieser Artikel kombiniert das Konzept einer "populären Ökonomie" mit dem einer "Nischenökonomie", um...
This article combines the concept of a “popular economy” with that of a “niche economy” to analyse t...
Public transport in Ghana is a private enterprise. The incapacity of the Ghanaian state to adequatel...
Background: Globally, people often migrate from rural to urban areas in search of employment. Lack o...
Doctor of Philosophy in Economics.University of KwaZulu-Natal, Pietermaritzburg, 2016.Slums are urba...
Owner-Drivers in the Tro-Tro Industry: A Look at Jitney Service Provision in Accra, GhanaThis study ...
In order to develop effective policies to improve conditions for people working in the informal sect...
The challenges that have come with the attainment of this independence remain a concern to myriad ci...
This article contributes to the discourse of participatory urban governance through a qualitative an...
This article draws on Asef Bayat’s theory of “quiet encroachment” to analyse the political agency of...
Public transport services in Kampala city are largely made up of minibus and motorbike taxis. • Whil...
This paper reveals a new informal economy in Ghana, Africa - the ‘in formal informal economy’ - wher...
This thesis re-evaluates the relationship between formal and informal work in third world cities. Un...
This paper investigates the ways in which linkages between the informal and formal segments of an ec...
It is estimated that around 90% of Ghana’s workforce is active in the informal economy. The immense ...
Dieser Artikel kombiniert das Konzept einer "populären Ökonomie" mit dem einer "Nischenökonomie", um...
This article combines the concept of a “popular economy” with that of a “niche economy” to analyse t...
Public transport in Ghana is a private enterprise. The incapacity of the Ghanaian state to adequatel...
Background: Globally, people often migrate from rural to urban areas in search of employment. Lack o...
Doctor of Philosophy in Economics.University of KwaZulu-Natal, Pietermaritzburg, 2016.Slums are urba...
Owner-Drivers in the Tro-Tro Industry: A Look at Jitney Service Provision in Accra, GhanaThis study ...
In order to develop effective policies to improve conditions for people working in the informal sect...
The challenges that have come with the attainment of this independence remain a concern to myriad ci...
This article contributes to the discourse of participatory urban governance through a qualitative an...
This article draws on Asef Bayat’s theory of “quiet encroachment” to analyse the political agency of...
Public transport services in Kampala city are largely made up of minibus and motorbike taxis. • Whil...
This paper reveals a new informal economy in Ghana, Africa - the ‘in formal informal economy’ - wher...
This thesis re-evaluates the relationship between formal and informal work in third world cities. Un...
This paper investigates the ways in which linkages between the informal and formal segments of an ec...
It is estimated that around 90% of Ghana’s workforce is active in the informal economy. The immense ...