Academic literature on the topic 'Street Vendors'

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Journal articles on the topic "Street Vendors"

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Rahayu, Murtanti Jani, and Septyani Widyastuti. "Dampak Kebijakan Pemerintah Daerah dalam Pengelolaan PKL di Kota Jakarta, Bandung dan Surabaya." TATALOKA 23, no. 2 (May 31, 2021): 201–11. http://dx.doi.org/10.14710/tataloka.23.2.201-211.

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As a developing country, Indonesia has a huge number of street vendors. Because of that, the existence of street vendors needs a special attention. This special attention is needed because streer vendors mostly occupy city's public spaces. Street vendor management in Indonesia's cities is based on the regulations that was made by each regional government which is pointing to Indonesia's higher level of regulation. Each regional regulation has their own unique characteristics. Jakarta, Bandung, and Surabaya are big cities that have street vendor problems that also have street vendor management regulations. From those three cities, the advantages and disadvantages of their regulation's contents will be revealed, enriched by information digging and research results. From the regulation side, those three cities showed their concern about regulations regarding street vendors. The forms of restructuring that has been done are relocation and stabilization. Those three cities are also supported by private sector regarding street vendor management. Street vendor management has a vital contribution towards regional economical growth and street vendor's income growth. These positive impacts increases the efficiency of city space management, so the city itself will look tidy, beautiful, and not congested, but street vendors are still poppimg out in restricted areas and old spaces, if the new managed locations are far from the crowds, the impact will decrease street vendor's income
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Mercy, Dudi, Philomena Muiruri, and Thomas Kibutu. "Effectiveness of Street Vendors Associations among Women Street Vendors: A Case Study of Nairobi CBD." East African Journal of Arts and Social Sciences 6, no. 2 (December 20, 2023): 390–404. http://dx.doi.org/10.37284/eajass.6.2.1646.

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This study was occasioned by the disparity gaps between allied associations supporting the rights of street vendors to operate in public spaces, the membership of street vendors into street vending associations and street vendors being incorporated in urban planning. The study assessed the effectiveness of street vendor associations among women street vendors in Nairobi City County based on the following objective; to examine factors influencing membership in street vendor associations. A descriptive survey study design was used to collect both qualitative and quantitative data using questionnaires, interviews, and content analysis. Snowball sampling was used in select 204 female street vendors from the streets. Quantitative data was filtered, coded, and analyzed using the Social Sciences Statistical Package (SPSS) while qualitative data was analyzed using verbatim quotes. The standard deviation, computation average and chi-square were performed to show the rankings for benefits and challenges of women`s street vending associations. The findings of the computation average showed that leadership opportunity was the highly ranked benefit (mean=0.913). While poor leadership was the most highly ranked challenge in street vendor’s associations (mean=1.651). The findings of the chi-square revealed that all benefits of street vendor associations influenced membership as their p-values were less than 0.05; Leadership opportunity (p=0.000), Welfare and access to credit (P=0.002), training in business (P=0.001) and networking (P=0.003). The study concludes that street vendors associations among women street vendors in Nairobi city county have been very effective in creating collective synergy rather than individual effects of each member. The study recommends association leaders to acquire leadership and management skills to enable them to carry out their mandate fully
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Yadewani, Dorris, and Syafrani . "The Street Vendors Perception to the Information of Public Access Disruption as the Effect of their Existence." International Journal of Engineering & Technology 7, no. 3.21 (August 8, 2018): 243. http://dx.doi.org/10.14419/ijet.v7i3.21.17167.

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Street vendors is a phenomenon in almost all regions in Indonesia, which is always a positive and negative impact on the region where the street vendor activity. The positive is the economy in a sustainable life in areas where street vendor activities, while the negative effects are disturbed some public access as a result of the existence of such street vendor, such as public roads are always jammed, the sidewalk is not functioning, trash increases or the environment increasingly neglected, area aesthetics will show discomfort. For the more crowded street vendor activities will have an impact upon the producer. However street vendor unaware that what was done to give effect to society because of disruption of public facilities. It is very necessary of information for the street vendor’s understanding and perception to the impact caused by their presence in an area. The research was conducted by qualitative method with type research field investigations and descriptive analysis of the street vendor, managers, buyers and decision makers who do trading activities in S. Parman Street, UlakKarang Padang. Samples as research subjects were the street vendors as much as 5 people, managers, local government, the buyer and road users. The data used are primary data and secondary data. Data Collection Techniques conducted by observation, interview, and documentation while data analysis is conducted qualitatively by a descriptive approach. The findings and the results are show that the information obtained is correct in running its activities to seek fortune already utilizing public access such as sidewalk and road. Contributions to the street vendors are expected to have awareness in running its activities mainly on the utilization of public access and if you want to keep running its activities must be willing to abide by all the regulations set forth by the government, because it became a street vendor answers to some of the problems faced by street vendors as well as for the government attempted to manage and regulate the existence of street vendors to be in line with policies that have been set by the government for street vendors somehow able to overcome the problem of the existence of the public economy.
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Damanik, Imelda Irmawati, Yohanes Satyayoga Raniasta, and Tutun Seliari. "Examining the Wahidin Street Vendors’ Tent Frame using Community Development Approach." Journal of Innovation and Community Engagement 3, no. 4 (November 30, 2022): 226–39. http://dx.doi.org/10.28932/ice.v3i4.5093.

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Street Vendor Tents (Pedagang Kaki Lima in Bahasa Indonesia, PKL) are an important element of informal economy activities, because it is one of the vacancies that can be found in various corners of the urban area, such as Dr. Wahidin Sudirohusodo street. Therefore, design for street venders’ tent is become important, because it will influence the image of the area with very active vibrant activities.. Designing street vendor’s tent is not an easy matter, because it is related to the government’s policies and also related to the technical structure. The study is co-working with PPKLY and APKLY. This partnership used community development approach, carried out by focus group discussion (FGD) because basically the street vendors understand their needs. The companion will provide an affordable design and lead the design to keep it in line with government policy. We hope the frame’s trial will develop a sustainable design which it is suitable for the PKL needs and also able to strengthen the image of the city area. Thus, the informal economic activities of street vendors can go hand in hand with the government's policies and meet the requirements of cleanliness, safety and have an aesthetic that strengthens the image of the area. And of course, this frame’s assembly must be easily understood by street vendors, because they are the ones who will use it.
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Rahayu, Murtanti Jani, Rr Ratri Werdiningtyas, and Musyawaroh Musyawaroh. "FAKTOR-FAKTOR YANG MEMPENGARUHI KEBERHASILAN PENATAAN PKL SEBAGAI STRATEGI PENATAAN RUANG KOTA SURAKARTA." Region: Jurnal Pembangunan Wilayah dan Perencanaan Partisipatif 7, no. 2 (June 8, 2017): 109. http://dx.doi.org/10.20961/region.v7i2.11582.

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<p><em>Hunger and poverty countermeasure was appointed to be the first target in the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) global mandate. It is relevant with Indonesia’s condition in the last three years in which the amount of poverty-stricken people grew significantly. To boost the population’s economy to a sustainable level, Solo’s City Government try to give more space to the informal sectors in the city. This policy doesn’t aim to improve the economy quantitatively but also equitably by facilitating the informal sectors, so that they can compete with the formal sectors that are dominated by the “big companies” as in nearly every big city in Indonesia.</em></p><p><em>One of the growing informal sectors is the street vendors. Relocation and stabilization are the two programs run by the Surakarta government to give a better chance for the street vendors to survive the competition with the formal sectors. Hundreds even thousands of street vendors in Solo has been regulated to empower the city’s local economy. The factors that influence the success of the street vendor regulation isn’t only perceived from the city’s aesthetics, which always became the main reason, but also perceived from the quality growth in activity performance after the program has been done to ensure sustainability.</em></p><em>The success of the street vendor regulation must be seen from the street vendor’s perspective. Unique character and street vendor behavior that vary richly must be known to ensure the street vendors can accept the planned program. In order to point out the location character role in the city’s spatial arrangement strategy, the focal point of this research is exploring the factors that influence street vendor regulation adjusting with the needs and demands of street vendors</em>
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Hanser, Amy. "Street Politics: Street Vendors and Urban Governance in China." China Quarterly 226 (April 18, 2016): 363–82. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0305741016000278.

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AbstractConflicts between urban street vendors and city regulators have become a common urban sight in Chinese cities today. This paper considers how visions of modern urban streets and sidewalks have helped to generate increasingly restrictive policies on street vending and spurred new forms of urban regulation and policing. While mostly an everyday routine of Chinese city life, the resulting vendor–chengguanconflicts dramatize state power in public and carry the latent danger of crowd violence in response. In particular, aggressive policing of highly visible city streets can at times produce a volatile “politics of the street” involving episodes of vendor resistance and even dramatic expressions of bystander solidarity which challenge these street-level expressions of state power.
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Rahayu, Murtanti Jani, Imam Buchori, and Retno Widjajanti. "Upaya Penataan Lingkungan Sosial dan Ekonomi Pedagang Kaki Lima di Kota Surakarta Berdasarkan Tipologi Lokasi Stabilisasi Surakarta." Jurnal Wilayah dan Lingkungan 8, no. 1 (April 30, 2020): 51–66. http://dx.doi.org/10.14710/jwl.8.1.51-66.

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The street vendors (SVs) select the trading locations according to the activity characteristics. The selected locations are often located in the areas of public facilities or state-owned lands which are all at once close to productive main activities. This way is aimed to drive many people to come and buy their goods after doing certain main activities. In addition, street vendors tend to choose trading locations on highways having vast social activities. The Surakarta City Government has controlled street vendors through structuring in the form of stabilization and relocation. This study aims to identify changes in the social and economic environment of street vendors based on the typology of street vendor stabilization locations in Surakarta. This study used a qualitative descriptive analysis to analyze changes in the social and economic environment with the typology of street vendor stabilization locations in Surakarta. The setting location typologies were determined based on the characteristics of street vendors’ stabilization locations viewed from the proximate main activities. The results of study showed that there were three typologies of stabilization locations, namely the locations approaching trading areas, settlement, and recreation. The operating hours of the street vendors depended on the proximate main activities. The street vendors in the settlement areas tended to open earlier and end their activities later at night than the street vendors proximate to the trade and recreation areas. The street vendors' capital starts at ≤ Rp. 500,000 to > Rp. 3,000,000. The street vendors with small capital usually trade longer than the street vendors with large capital. The street vendors with large capital are most often found trading at night.
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Taufik, Muhamat. "Kajian Aktivitas Pedagang Kaki Lima di Ruang Publik Kawasan Simpang Lima Pati." JURNAL PEMBANGUNAN WILAYAH & KOTA 9, no. 2 (June 11, 2012): 138. http://dx.doi.org/10.14710/pwk.v9i2.11566.

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Street vendors in Pati Simpang Lima area are invading urban public spaces with increasing number. Whileproviding job opportunities, their unregulated existence reduces the level of service of the public spacesand has starting to create environmental problems. The study examines the street vendors’ activitycharacteristics, space and infrastructure availability, seller and customer preference and the localgovernment’s policy on street vendors. The study identified that the availability of open public space inPati Simpang Lima area have attracted the increase of street vendor activities. There is a growing needfor infrastructure such as parking spaces, public toilets and waste related infrastructure. There has notbeen any local government regulation let alone innovative approaches to street vendor activities in eithersocio‐cultural, economic nor normative terms. The direction was to physically regulate the street vendorarea in terms of vendor space allocation, business times regulations and infrastructure. The lack of spacein the area has imposed a need for relocation for some of the vendors to a new place such as JalanPenjawi, with adequate supply of infrastructure. In terms of policy, there should be legalization andlimitation of the number of street vendors using socio‐cultural, economic and normative models.Keywords: street vendor activity, public space, area infrastructure
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Saini, Ashu, Fariya, Monika Agarwal, Parveen Kumar, Richa Chauhan, and Lata Surendra Prasad Singh. "Unveiling awareness and perception patterns: a comprehensive analysis of PM SVA Nidhi for street vendors in Meerut." Journal of Social Economics Research 11, no. 1 (January 22, 2024): 60–72. http://dx.doi.org/10.18488/35.v11i1.3610.

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The vendors on the street are unorganized. They are solitary workers who rely on the sale of goods and services on urban streets to support their livelihoods. Many people sacrificed their jobs during the COVID-19 pandemic lockdown, and these people faced many issues for survival. To uplift their livelihood, the Government of India & Ministry of Housing and Urban Affairs introduced the scheme “Pradhan Mantri Street Vendor’s Atmanirbhar Nidhi Yojana (PM–SVA Nidhi)” on June 01, 2020. This paper attempts to study the awareness and perceptions regarding the implementation of the PM SVA Nidhi Yojana for street vendors in Meerut City. A total of 150 street vendors from Meerut were selected with the help of a convenience sampling technique. The latent constructs are described using the partial least square structural equation modeling (PLS-SEM) approach, with sufficient empirical support for the hypothesized correlations between awareness and perception. The study's outcome revealed that there is a significant relationship between the awareness and perception of street vendors concerning the PM-SVANidhi scheme. Insights into awareness and perception patterns among street vendors could affect communication theories, such as how information spreads and influences behavior in underserved communities. The study reveals the awareness and perception patterns among street vendors. Policymakers can use these insights to enhance the scheme's effectiveness.
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Andy Fefta Wijaya, Fadel Muhammad, Marta Trifena Patriot, and Asti Amelia Novita. "The Implementation of Street Vendor Relocation Policy in the Pro-Environmental Era in Mojokerto City Square." Journal of Indonesia Sustainable Development Planning 2, no. 2 (August 23, 2021): 145–59. http://dx.doi.org/10.46456/jisdep.v2i2.155.

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Street vendors are one of the informal sectors that often cause problems in urban areas, such as the street vendors in Mojokerto City Square. The presence of street vendors is considered to have disturbed the orderliness and cleanliness of the city environment. Therefore, based on the Local Government Regulation of Mojokerto City No. 5 of 2005 concerning the Arrangement and Development of Street Vendor Activities, the government implemented a policy of street vendor relocation. This paper aims to analyze the implementation of street vendor relocation policy in the area of ​​Mojokerto City square. This research uses a descriptive qualitative approach involving six key informants with interviews and documentation as the data collection method. This study indicates that implementing the street vendors relocation policy in the square area of ​​Mojokerto City is not entirely effective. Four factors influence the implementation of the policy, communication, resources, disposition, and bureaucratic structure.
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Street Vendors"

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Chong, Yuk-sik Jone. "Legend at street corner on-street news stalls as a character-defining element of Hong Kong street life /." Click to view the E-thesis via HKUTO, 2008. http://sunzi.lib.hku.hk/hkuto/record/B42188775.

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Chong, Yuk-sik Jone, and 莊玉惜. "Legend at street corner: on-street news stalls as a character-defining element of Hong Kong street life." Thesis, The University of Hong Kong (Pokfulam, Hong Kong), 2008. http://hub.hku.hk/bib/B42188775.

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Lapah, Yota Cyprian. "Migratory trajectories among street vendors in urban South Africa." Thesis, University of the Western Cape, 2011. http://etd.uwc.ac.za/index.php?module=etd&action=viewtitle&id=gen8Srv25Nme4_2745_1362391294.

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This study investigates ways in which migratory trajectories relate to the gradual insertion and eventual integration of immigrants. It therefore shows the contribution of social capital in the migration and insertion into the entrepreneurial city of the host country. The focus of the study is on immigrants of African origin. It is hypothesized that immigrants of different nationalities in South Africa use 
particular assets to engage in street vending as a way of insertion into their new environment. Data were obtained through a survey of two hundred and eight (208) respondents conveniently 
selected. The survey was carried out in five suburbs of Cape Town and as well as at some major road junctions where these vendors are found. The Statistical package for Social Science (SPSS) was used to analyse the data. The results showed that nationality was an important determinant of the migratory trajectories of immigrant vendors. Migration has been on the increase with the 
improvement in technology and globalization. In the same light, migration into South African cities mainly from the rest of Africa and Asia took an upward trend especially after the fall of Apartheid 
Regime and the advent of democracy in the nineties. Street vendors form part of these immigrants in South Africa. Many of them especially from other African countries find it a suitable means of 
survival. Faced with the difficulty of getting jobs in South Africa, immigrants resort to informal trading as a starting point for survival. They may change to other activities depending on certain variables like duration of stay, level of education, age, sex, marital status, social capital and networks. Coming from different socioeconomic, cultural and political backgrounds, these immigrants 
resort to different ways of migrating and forms of adaptation aimed at sustaining their livelihood in their new environments. Most studies in the field of migration and entrepreneurship focus on 
remittances by the migrants as well as their impact on both their place of departure and on the place of destination. Little attention is paid to the way they migrate and how they insert themselves in the entrepreneurial city.
 

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Baroni, Bruno Nazim. "Spatial stratification of street vendors in downtown Mexico City." Thesis, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 2007. http://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/39932.

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Thesis (M.C.P.)--Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Dept. of Urban Studies and Planning, 2007.
Includes bibliographical references (p. 69-71).
The fight for space between city administrators and street vendors working in city centers is one of the major controversies about street commerce. Trying to renew and upgrade their downtowns, city administrators of most urban areas have attempted to relocate street vendors from central areas to peripheries, from the streets to indoor public markets. That attempt has almost always found fierce opposition among street vendors, who claim that entering into contact with the greatest number of pedestrians is the key to successful street vending. Most scholars studying street vendors have not questioned such a proposition; on the contrary, they have somehow taken it for granted. Yet, a comparison of four street vendor groups -- two located in the most accessible areas and two in less accessible areas of downtown Mexico City -- revels that street vendors with a more limited access to customers can obtained better working conditions and economic results than others who are located in most accessible areas. The following factors explain the better results of the street vendors located in the less accessible areas of downtown Mexico City. First, street vendors located in the less accessible areas have easier access to storage space, more room for large stalls and are less likely to have their goods confiscated by the police.
(cont.) These advantages provide them the possibility to increase the scale of their commerce. Second, the possibility to increase the scale of their commerce and their limited competition for space function as an incentive to expand their network of suppliers to low-cost intermediaries -- in this specific case with intermediaries involved in smuggling -- and to develop street vendor organizations that support their product specialization. Having very low prices and working in specialized street markets, the street vendors located in the less accessible areas of downtown Mexico City attract customers despite their location. In contrast, the street vendors located in the most accessible areas because of their small-scale type of commerce and because they are located in areas where street vending is officially banned but unofficially tolerated they got involved in a competition for space that constrains their profits and lead the street vendors to augment their number to gain political baking. If the city government will not support street vendors located in the most accessible areas -- in particular, if it will not act to regulate competition for space of these street vendor groups -- street trading of smuggled products will remain the best alternative for Mexico City street vendors.
by Bruno Nazim Baroni.
M.C.P.
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Tyida, Vuyokazi Andisiwe. "How female street vendors in Nelson Mandela Bay are organized." Thesis, Nelson Mandela Metropolitan University, 2012. http://hdl.handle.net/10948/d1012674.

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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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Feng, Jia. "Street vendors' situation and government's policy examination in Nanjing, China." Miami University / OhioLINK, 2009. http://rave.ohiolink.edu/etdc/view?acc_num=miami1259965903.

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Feng, Jia. "Street vendors' situation and government's policy examination in Nanjing, China." Oxford, Ohio : Miami University, 2008. http://rave.ohiolink.edu/etdc/view?acc%5Fnum=miami1259965903.

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Madjitey, Pardikor. "The socio-educational development of children of street vendors in Ghana." Thesis, University of Pretoria, 2014. http://hdl.handle.net/2263/46281.

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This thesis presents the outcomes of a study on the socio-educational development of children of street vendors in Ghana. For many children in Ghana, the reality of childhood and a sound education is compromised by premature involvement in economic activities in order to augment the meagre incomes of their parents and guardians to survive. The research inquiry is guided by the main research question: What are the social and educational challenges in the development of the children of street vendors in Ghana? The study, specifically sought to explore the nature and prevalence of children of street vendors in Ghana; how the familial circumstances of children of street vendors affect their socio-educational development; how life on the street affect the socio-educational development of children of street vendors and what the implications of the findings are for stakeholders and policy makers in addressing the street child phenomenon. The study was conducted according to the qualitative research approach, guided by the interpretivist paradigm. A case study research design was utilized in investigating six street vendors and their six children who live and do their business on the streets for their stories and viewpoints as to how they experience the life on the street. I used in-depth interview, and observations to explore participants‘ understanding and interpretation of the phenomenon. The theoretical frameworks of Bronfenbrenner and Piaget facilitated data collection and reinforced the findings. Analysis revealed that children are on the street with their parents as a result of socio-economic problems (such as economic stagnation, urbanization, rural-to-urban migration, inadequate housing, high birth rates, and the absence of government assistance programmes) which have plagued the country for many years. Anecdotal evidence pointed out that children engaging in work is prevalent in Ghana and often constrains the choices and freedom of children and their human rights and socio-economic welfare. Findings further revealed that the extended families play an important role in supporting and maintaining family ties. It is argued that, when government provides social safety nets for poor families, especially for those in the urban informal sector the likelihood that they will engage their children in, street trade and vending will minimize.
Thesis (PhD)--University of Pretoria, 2014.
tm2015
Early Childhood Education
PhD
Unrestricted
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FALLA, O. C. A. M. VARGAS. "Outside the Law: An Ethnographic Study of Street Vendors in Bogotá." Doctoral thesis, Università degli Studi di Milano, 2016. http://hdl.handle.net/2434/384577.

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Millions of people worldwide work outside the law as street vendors in order to earn a living. However, they often work in fear of police evictions and confiscations since their work is in many places considered illegal. In this context, formalization (steps towards legalization) is often portrayed as a model for empowerment that allows poor street vendors to improve their well-being. Formalization, as a model to manage street vending, is widely promoted by various international development organizations. While important, studies of formalization show that street vendors often resist state control, and the majority continues to work outside the law. The main research question guiding this study is: how does formalization of street vendors in Bogotá enable and/or hinder their well-being? To examine this question, this study uses an ethnographic approach and the concept of social control within the tradition of sociology of law. The data for this study was collected through ethnographic fieldwork conducted between 2012 and 2014 in the city of Bogotá, Colombia. Three groups were studied: vendors within the transitional zones (a formalization program), two rickshaw driver associations, and itinerant ice cream vendors. The main findings illustrate that although street vendors work outside the law, they do not operate in a state of chaos or anarchy. Quite the opposite, law and other forms of social control are present in their work. These practices of control often affect their well-being. Despite harsh working conditions, well-being according to them means more than economic survival, and often, street vendors strive to improve their lives and gain independence in their work. Another finding is that formalization is often directed toward the more established vendors and does not account for the fact that new individuals arrive on the streets every day trying to make a living. Often, the most vulnerable groups (immigrants, women, the newly unemployed) lack the time and knowledge to formalize or simply are not targeted in formalization programs. Without a deep understanding of how social control already operates, the state runs the risk of developing formalization initiatives that undermine the well-being of the most vulnerable groups. Thus, this study of everyday forms of social control provides empirically based insights into the ways law influences the lives of those working outside the law.
Un gran número de personas en el mundo trabajan en actividades no reguladas en la ley, tal es el caso de los vendedores ambulantes, los cuales se dedican al comercio informal con el fin de ganarse la vida. Las personas dedicadas a este tipo de actividades viven frecuentemente en condiciones de incertidumbre y de miedo, pues carecen de una licencia para operar; esto conlleva a constantes desalojos e incluso la confiscación de su mercancía por parte de la policía. La formalización de los vendedores ambulantes se ha vislumbrado como un modelo que permite mejorar su bienestar y ha sido ampliamente promovido por varias organizaciones internacionales de desarrollo, tales como el Banco Mundial, las Naciones Unidas y la Organización Internacional del Trabajo. Sin embargo estudios sobre formalización evidencian la resistencia por parte de los vendedores ambulantes a un control formal y en la mayoría de casos continúan desarrollando sus actividades sin regulación legal alguna. El presente estudio se plantea la siguiente pregunta de investigación: ¿cómo la formalización (pasos para la legalización) de los vendedores ambulantes en Bogotá posibilita y/o impide su bienestar? Para responder esta pregunta se utiliza un enfoque etnográfico y el concepto de control social basado en la tradición de la sociología del derecho. Los datos utilizados en el presente estudio fueron recogidos a través de trabajo de campo etnográfico realizado entre 2012 y 2014 en Bogotá, Colombia. Tres grupos fueron estudiados: los vendedores dentro de las zonas de transición (un programa de formalización), dos asociaciones de bicitaxistas, y los vendedores ambulantes dedicados al comercio de helados. Los resultados de esta investigación muestran que, a pesar de la informalidad en la que trabajan los vendedores ambulantes, estos no operan en un estado de caos o anarquía, por el contrario, la ley y otras formas de control social están presentes en su trabajo, aunque muchas veces estas mismas sean la causa la incertidumbre y de miedo en su quehacer diario. A pesar de estas condiciones, los trabajadores informales se esfuerzan por mejorar su calidad de vida y lograr mayor independencia, incentivados por su idea de bienestar, la cual va mucho mas allá de la simple supervivencia económica. Otro hallazgo es en relación con la formalización, la cual se dirige hacia los proveedores más establecidos y no tiene en cuenta el hecho de que nuevos individuos llegan a las calles todos los días buscando nuevas opciones para ganarse la vida. Tal es el caso de los inmigrantes, las mujeres, los nuevos desempleados, y en general los grupos más vulnerables, los cuales carecen de tiempo y conocimiento para formalizar su actividad o simplemente los programas de formalización no están en la práctica dirigidos hacia estos grupos. Sin una profunda comprensión de como opera el control social en la vida cotidiana de los vendedores ambulantes, las reformas legales corren el riesgo de implementar iniciativas de formalización que atentan contra el bienestar de los grupos más vulnerables de la sociedad. Por lo tanto, este studio, de las formas cotidianas de control social, proporciona una visión que está basada en la investigación empírica sobre las formas en las que el derecho influye en la vida de las personas que trabajan por fuera del marco legal.
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Dube, Thulani. "An investigation of the contribution of street vending on livelihoods : case of street vendors in Nkonkobe Municipality." Thesis, University of Fort Hare, 2017. http://hdl.handle.net/10353/6068.

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The informal sector thrives in a context of high unemployment, underemployment, poverty, gender inequality and precarious work. It plays a significant role in such circumstances, especially in income generation and in contributing to the livelihood of those engaged in it. The study investigated the contribution of street vending to the livelihood of street vendors in Nkonkobe Municipality. The aim of the study was to investigate whether street vending has the potential to sustain the lives of those engaged in it. In order to reach its objectives, the study employed a qualitative research approach whereby a non-probability sampling design in the form of a purposive sampling method was adopted and considered appropriate for this study. In terms of data collection, the study made use of structured questionnaires as a data collection method whereby questionnaires were administered and distributed to 40 street venders. The Upper Bound Poverty Line (UBPL) was used as a measurement to assess whether the participants’ incomes were above the poverty datum line in order to determine the sector’s contribution to the traders’ livelihood. From this study, it was found that street vending has both positive and negative impacts with regard to the success and profit-earning potential of these traders. Thus, the study concluded that street vending is a vital community development tool and a major source of livelihood as it plays a very important socio-economic role in Nkonkobe and in South Africa in general. The sector provides a livelihood for a huge population mainly comprised of the poor and other impoverished groups of society.
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Books on the topic "Street Vendors"

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V, Mitullah Winnie, and Kamau Anne W, eds. Women street vendors. Nairobi, Kenya: Institute for Development Studies, University of Nairobi, 2002.

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Museum, Vietnamese Women's. Gánh hàng rong: Street vendors. Hanoi: Women's Publishing House, 2008.

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Samoa. Ministry of Women, Community, and Social Development., ed. Child vendors pilot survey. [Samoa]: Ministry of Women, Community and Social Development, 2005.

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Krishna, Sangeeta. Women vendors: A study of Varanasi. Varanasi: Faculty of Social Sciences, Banaras Hindu University, 2001.

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Josh, Estey, and Day Katey, eds. Nineteen: The lives of Jakarta's street vendors. [Jakarta]: Mercy Corps, 2008.

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1948-, Bhowmik Sharit, ed. Street vendors in the global urban economy. New Delhi: Routledge, 2010.

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1948-, Bhowmik Sharit, ed. Street vendors in the global urban economy. New Delhi: Routledge, 2010.

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(Organization), Equations, ed. Women street vendors & tourism: Negotiating lives & spaces. Bengaluru, Karnataka, India: Equations, 2014.

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Meissonnier, Joël. Marchands de rue à Istanbul: Présence urbaine d'une offre commerciale en perpétuelle recomposition spatiale. Istanbul: Institut français d'études anatoliennes Geroges Dumézil, 2006.

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Mazzei, Enrique. Los "camelós" en la frontera uruguayo-brasileña: Informalización económica, social y política. Montevideo, Uruguay: Universidad de la República, Faculdad de Ciencias Sociales, Departamento de Sociología, 2002.

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Book chapters on the topic "Street Vendors"

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Swanson, Kate. "Street vendors." In The Routledge Handbook of Latin American Development, 355–63. London ; New York : Routledge, 2019.: Routledge, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781315162935-31.

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Woldeamanuel, Mintesnot G. "Street vendors." In Urban Issues in Rapidly Growing Cities, 153–69. Milton Park, Abingdon, Oxon ; New York, NY : Routledge, 2020.: Routledge, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9780429344831-10.

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Nicula, Virgil, Donatella Privitera, and Simona Spânu. "Street Food and Street Vendors, a Culinary Heritage?" In Innovative Business Development—A Global Perspective, 241–50. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-01878-8_20.

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Bhowmik, Sharit K., and Debdulal Saha. "Introduction: Financial Inclusion and Street Vendors." In Financial Inclusion of the Marginalised, 1–17. India: Springer India, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-81-322-1506-6_1.

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Bhowmik, Sharit K., and Debdulal Saha. "Why Do Street Vendors Need Finance?" In Financial Inclusion of the Marginalised, 41–59. India: Springer India, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-81-322-1506-6_3.

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Coletto, Diego. "Ambulantes and Camelôs (The Street Vendors)." In The Informal Economy and Employment in Brazil, 97–150. New York: Palgrave Macmillan US, 2010. http://dx.doi.org/10.1057/9780230113992_3.

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Zuberec, Celia, and Sarah Turner. "Hanoi's street vendors on the move." In Marketplaces, 15–27. London: Routledge, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781003197058-2.

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Matos-Rodríguez, Felix V. "Street Vendors, Pedlars, Shop-Owners and Domestics." In Engendering History, 176–93. New York: Palgrave Macmillan US, 1995. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-137-07302-0_10.

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Swamy, Ranjini, and Arbind Singh. "Creating a Supportive Entrepreneurial Ecosystem for Street Vendors: The Case of the National Association of Street Vendors of India (NASVI)." In Applying Quality of Life Research, 151–72. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-71014-3_8.

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Morales, Alfonso. "Understanding and Interpreting Tax Compliance Strategies Among Street Vendors." In The Ethics of Tax Evasion, 83–106. New York, NY: Springer New York, 2011. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4614-1287-8_5.

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Conference papers on the topic "Street Vendors"

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Hermawati, Rina, and Caroline Paskarina. "Arranging Street Vendors : A Study on Policy Management of Street Vendors in Bandung." In International Conference on Administrative Science (ICAS 2017). Paris, France: Atlantis Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.2991/icas-17.2017.59.

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Balamurugan, J., R. Ayappan, S. Sudhakar, S. Stephen Durai, S. Ramesh, and C. Prabakaran. "Assessment of Skills Street Vendors." In 2023 International Conference on New Frontiers in Communication, Automation, Management and Security (ICCAMS). IEEE, 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/iccams60113.2023.10525956.

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Roselamat, Muhammad Hafizie, Alia Amira Abd Rahman, Masyarah Zulhaida Masmuzidin, and Nur Syahela Hussein. "Ngeteh: Responsive website for street vendors." In VIII INTERNATIONAL ANNUAL CONFERENCE “INDUSTRIAL TECHNOLOGIES AND ENGINEERING” (ICITE 2021). AIP Publishing, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/5.0124247.

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El-Kadi, Abed El-Wahab. "Architectural Solutions to “Street Vendors” in Cairo." In The Barcelona Conference on Arts, Media & Culture 2022. The International Academic Forum(IAFOR), 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.22492/issn.2435-9475.2022.9.

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Hermawatii, Rina, and Nunung Runiawati. "Socio-Economic Dynamics of Street Vendors in Bandung." In International Conference on Administrative Science (ICAS 2017). Paris, France: Atlantis Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.2991/icas-17.2017.46.

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Ismail, Ashari, and Firman Umar. "Female Street Vendors In Domestic And Public Violence." In Proceedings of the 1st International Conference on Social Sciences (ICSS 2018). Paris, France: Atlantis Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.2991/icss-18.2018.195.

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CRUZ, PEDRO CRUZ. "The Theater of the People: A look into Queens Street Vending Culture." In 2021 AIA/ACSA Intersections Research Conference. ACSA Press, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.35483/acsa.aia.inter.21.25.

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The Theater of the People project recognizes street vendors in Queens, Corona Plaza as merely the visible performance of a network of distributed and transient actors and social infrastructure. Simultaneously, an actual theater sits between a public plaza and a public park, offering a potential political, economic and social connection between the two public arenas. What can a building built for performance teach us when it becomes a scaffold for an entirely different play? How might we imagine a Theater for the People? Within the practice of everyday life, street vendors produce an inherently social space that’s embodied, processual, rhetorical, and political. What happens when a theater, a space of leisure that gives pleasure from the art of fiction, becomes the backdrop for the script of the street vendor? What would a space for the state- less look like? What role would the politics of aesthetics have in such a place? By portraying these relations and connections of everyday life interactions within public spaces, we can think of ways to invent new, inclusive futures.
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Desmaryani, Susi. "How Street Vendors Survive with Competence And Innovation Capabilities." In 13th Annual International International Conference on Industrial Engineering and Operations Management. Michigan, USA: IEOM Society International, 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.46254/an13.20230466.

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Oemar, Hirawati, Eri Achiraeniwati, Yanti Sri Rejeki, Anis Septiani, and Ezar Amrullah. "Improving the Awareness of Providing Halal Food Among Street Vendors." In 2nd Social and Humaniora Research Symposium (SoRes 2019). Paris, France: Atlantis Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.2991/assehr.k.200225.005.

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Artina, Vienna, and Wijayanti Prabandasari. "Hygiene and Sanitation at Street Vendors That Sell Around Monas." In Asia Tourism Forum 2016 - the 12th Biennial Conference of Hospitality and Tourism Industry in Asia. Paris, France: Atlantis Press, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.2991/atf-16.2016.28.

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Reports on the topic "Street Vendors"

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Cohen, Monique. Women street vendors: The road to recognition. Population Council, 2000. http://dx.doi.org/10.31899/pgy4.1021.

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Benson, Vivienne, and Lina Maria Martínez Quintero. Ending the Financial Entrapment of Street Vendors in Colombia. Institute of Development Studies and The Impact Initiative, February 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.35648/20.500.12413/11781/ii347.

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Vyas, Aditi, Priyanka Banerjee, Pranita Achyut, and Emilie Wilson. Fostering Gender Diversity and Inclusiveness in Street Vendor Associations in India. Institute of Development Studies, June 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.19088/core.2023.001.

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This project, led by the International Center for Research on Women (ICRW), focuses on the effects of the socioeconomic crisis created by the Covid-19 pandemic on informal women workers in India, particularly street vendors in the context of shrinking state support and gaps in access to social security. The study emphasises the importance of understanding the specific opportunities and challenges faced by those engaged in informal work, especially women, so that policies are informed by and respond to their specific needs. It also provides valuable insights into how prevalent gender norms interact with gaps in state support to disproportionately impact the conditions of informal women workers when compared to male street vendors. ICRW successfully engaged with grassroots organisations to advise them on how their programmes can be more inclusive and responsive to the differentiated needs of women street vendors.
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Kramer, Robert. LED Street Lighting Implementation Research, Support, and Testing. Purdue University, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.5703/1288284317274.

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This report describes the results of technical analysis, field tests, and laboratory tests that were performed for LED highway lighting options by the Energy Efficiency and Reliability Center (EERC) at Purdue University Northwest for the Indiana Department of Transportation (INDOT). This effort was conducted over the past 3 years to evaluate and test the technology and viability of using modern highway lighting technology to enhance energy efficiency, safety, security, and economic development of communities and roadways. During the testing period there was a continuous discussion between INDOT and EERC regarding the laboratory and field testing of INDOT approved luminaires submitted by vendors. There were multiple discussions with INDOT and vendors regarding the individual details and issues for the 29 luminaires that were tested. A comparison study was conducted by EERC of the various alternatives and comparison to currently installed luminaires. Data was collected for field tests of the luminaires by EERC and INDOT personnel for the luminaires. Field data was evaluated and compared to lighting models using vendor supplied ies data files. Multiple presentations were made at 3 separate Purdue Road Schools regarding the results and procedures of the testing program by EERC in conjunction with INDOT. A total of 22 final reports, considered confidential by INDOT, for individual vendor luminaires have been prepared as part of this effort. These reports were submitted sequentially to INDOT as testing was completed during the course of this effort. A total of 29 luminaires were tested. Some luminaire testing was terminated during testing due to design issues or vendor requests. All testing was summarized in the INDOT specification sheet attached to each report. Observations regarding the consistency of the supplied test luminaire with the requirements of Section 7.2 of the INDOT test procedure “Procedure for evaluation and approval list requirements for solid state ballasted luminaires ITM 957-17P” is provided in the Appendix to the report for each luminaire. Details regarding how these tests were performed and the respective associated evaluation of performance and reliability are provided in the report. This effort included: consideration of published and vendor information; appraisal of products consistent with national industry standards; review of physical design, thermal performance; laboratory testing of photopic performance, reliability, life cycle data and characteristics, and power characteristics; technical and probabilistic risk studies; and field testing and analysis of LED light sources including comparison to currently installed conventional light sources. Assistance in preparing INDOT standards for highway lighting was provided on multiple occasions.
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Rivadeneira, Alex. Public Transportation and Consumer Prices: Chain Stores, Street Vendors and Mom and Pop Stores. Banco de México, May 2024. http://dx.doi.org/10.36095/banxico/di.2024.02.

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Improving public transport infrastructure changes local market conditions. In this paper, I examine the impact of the construction and operation of "Metrobus", Mexico City's Bus Rapid Transit (BRT) system on consumer prices in chain stores, street vendors, and small family-owned (mom and pop) stores. I do so through a panel event study design. I consider the construction and operation of BRT as two different phenomena; while the former is associated to street closures, the latter reduces transportation costs. I show that only prices in mom and pop stores respond to changes in local market conditions produced by the introduction of BRT. For these businesses, construction pressures prices downwards; in contrast, operation is associated with partial price recoveries. I cannot reject a null effect in prices from chain stores or street vendors.
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Nemer, Leda, Ishank Gorla, Kathrin Demmler, and Sharelle Polack. India’s Clean Street Food Hubs: Working with vendors to improve food safety and strengthen urban food systems. Global Alliance for Improved Nutrition (GAIN), May 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.36072/wp.3.

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programme, CLARISSA. Children Discontinue Studies Due to Homelessness and Negligence, or Fall into Substance Abuse. Institute of Development Studies, June 2024. http://dx.doi.org/10.19088/clarissa.2024.026.

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The CLARISSA Nepal Action Research Group discussed in this report is located in a UNESCO world heritage site, in one of the Durbar Squares in Kathmandu Valley. The location was selected as a cluster for CLARISSA processes due to its density of street-connected children and child street vendors. These children are highly mobile, and the nature of the neighbourhood is diverse. The involvement of children in child labour, such as children working in small-scale khaja ghars and Adult Entertainment Sector venues, can be directly seen in this area, making it an important location for CLARISSA Action Research. This Action Research Group focused on two topics: children discontinuing their studies due to homelessness and negligence, and children falling into substance abuse.
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programme, CLARISSA. Children Enter the Adult Entertainment Sector and Face Labour Exploitation and Sexual Abuse. Institute of Development Studies, July 2024. http://dx.doi.org/10.19088/clarissa.2024.032.

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This is a report of CLARISSA Nepal Action Research Group 8, which is located in a busy commercial, historical and tourist destination in the centre of Kathmandu Valley. The area is famous for its multiple big-scale shopping complexes and wholesale markets and for being a hotspot for street vendors and small-scale Adult Entertainment Sector (AES) venues. As many children and young people work in the AES in this area, the location was selected as one of the most important working locations for CLARISSA Action Research. The theme of this group was 'Children enter the AES through friends, relatives, and unknown persons and face labour exploitation and sexual abuse'.
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Delbridge, Victoria, Astrid Haas, Oliver Harman, Anthony Venables, and Khady Dia-Sarr. Enhancing the financial position of cities: Evidence from Dakar. UNHabitat, March 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.35489/bsg-igc-wp_2022/3.

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The city of Dakar is one of the only cities in Africa to come close to taking a municipal bond to market. The US$40 million bond, set to launch in 2014, was designed to fund a new market hall for informal traders in the city. The market would relocate more than 4,000 street vendors, with the aim of moving them from side streets into a safe and central place to sell their goods, with access to credit agencies and other market services. Development partners, including the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, the World Bank’s Public-Private Infrastructure Advisory Facility (PPIAF), Cities Alliance, and USAID, played a crucial role in making the bond terms viable – both in shouldering the financial burden of developing internal creditworthiness, and in providing expertise and guarantees to reduce the risk. Although the bond’s launch was ultimately stopped by national government decree, the process of preparing for the bond has greatly improved the financial management capabilities and creditworthiness of the city. As a result, Dakar’s bond journey is still paying dividends to the city today, with a number of successful concessional and commercial loans. The process also deepened the city’s connection with its residents – with small bond denominations, informal traders were one of the key investors. The motivation for the bond was in part due to the city’s lack of control over its financial resources. While the most recent decentralisation law amendment, Acte III de la Décentralisation of 2013, has seen many responsibilities devolved to the local level, finances to deliver on this new mandate have not followed. In fact, all revenue and expenditure for local governments in Senegal are processed at the national level, leaving little room or incentive for financial reform. Surprisingly, despite this, the law gives local governments relative independence in taking on debt. This meant that when Mayor Sall came into office with a vision for change, the only viable financing opportunity within the city of Dakar’s control was via the latter. This legislated independence is also the reason why the halting of the bond was so heavily contested. The city of Dakar provides an example of the importance of the political landscape in effecting any innovative reforms, as well as the need for the national government to buy-in to the fact that successful cities are in their interest as well. This is particularly critical in Dakar’s case, given the city’s finances are managed at the national level. Fortuitously, the national government is now beginning to focus on improving local revenues, primarily through property taxes, as well as better coordination amongst different stakeholders through a dedicated department and the ‘Local Fiscality Commissions’ described below.
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Morgan and Gardiner. L51980 Monitoring Pipeline Coatings With the Elastic Wave In-Line Inspection Vehicle. Chantilly, Virginia: Pipeline Research Council International, Inc. (PRCI), March 2000. http://dx.doi.org/10.55274/r0011180.

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This report describes a program with the aim of improving discrimination of stress corrosion cracking (SCC) from non-SCC in data from the Elastic Wave (EW) in-line inspection tool. A major component of the work reported here was to create a database of features reported from Elastic Wave inspections. This allows consistent information to be collated for excavated features, as a basis for characterization of the EW tool's response to particular features. Following completion of the work reported here the database was transferred to Pipeline Integrity International, vendors of the Elastic Wave service.
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