Solving the Cape Town Puzzle: Class, Politics and Migration in the Informal Food Economy

Political empowerment possesses significant potential to facilitate the realization of economic inclusion by allowing marginalized groups to make claims on the state in the pursuit of justice and equality. This is particularly promising for individuals engaged in informal economic activity. Cape To...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Graeme Young
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of the Western Cape 2025-01-01
Series:African Human Mobility Review
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.epubs.ac.za/index.php/ahmr/article/view/2440
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1832592964732321792
author Graeme Young
author_facet Graeme Young
author_sort Graeme Young
collection DOAJ
description Political empowerment possesses significant potential to facilitate the realization of economic inclusion by allowing marginalized groups to make claims on the state in the pursuit of justice and equality. This is particularly promising for individuals engaged in informal economic activity. Cape Town, South Africa, is in many ways a model for this idea: following its post-apartheid democratization process, governments at the local, provincial, and national levels officially recognize the value of informality and have adopted policies to support it. Yet persistent forms of exclusion for those who engage in informal economic activity remain. This article examines why this is the case. In doing so, it explores the forms of marginalization experienced by migrant and non-migrant workers in the Cape Town’s informal food economy and highlights the importance of three factors in explaining why democratization has not translated into greater inclusion: (1) the contours of inequality in the city; (2) the nature of local and national party politics; and (3) the specific dynamics that surround migration and informality. When seeking to translate institutional change into more inclusive forms of development, it emphasizes the importance of paying attention to both open democratic structures and processes and the forms of politics that fill them.  
format Article
id doaj-art-dd8958a99fe64861aafbbfaab220aa72
institution Kabale University
issn 2411-6955
2410-7972
language English
publishDate 2025-01-01
publisher University of the Western Cape
record_format Article
series African Human Mobility Review
spelling doaj-art-dd8958a99fe64861aafbbfaab220aa722025-01-20T22:25:39ZengUniversity of the Western CapeAfrican Human Mobility Review2411-69552410-79722025-01-0110310.14426/ahmr.v10i3.2440Solving the Cape Town Puzzle: Class, Politics and Migration in the Informal Food Economy Graeme Young0School of Social and Political Sciences,Glasgow University, Glasgow, United Kingdom Political empowerment possesses significant potential to facilitate the realization of economic inclusion by allowing marginalized groups to make claims on the state in the pursuit of justice and equality. This is particularly promising for individuals engaged in informal economic activity. Cape Town, South Africa, is in many ways a model for this idea: following its post-apartheid democratization process, governments at the local, provincial, and national levels officially recognize the value of informality and have adopted policies to support it. Yet persistent forms of exclusion for those who engage in informal economic activity remain. This article examines why this is the case. In doing so, it explores the forms of marginalization experienced by migrant and non-migrant workers in the Cape Town’s informal food economy and highlights the importance of three factors in explaining why democratization has not translated into greater inclusion: (1) the contours of inequality in the city; (2) the nature of local and national party politics; and (3) the specific dynamics that surround migration and informality. When seeking to translate institutional change into more inclusive forms of development, it emphasizes the importance of paying attention to both open democratic structures and processes and the forms of politics that fill them.   http://www.epubs.ac.za/index.php/ahmr/article/view/2440informal economy; political rights; economic and social rights; development; South Africa
spellingShingle Graeme Young
Solving the Cape Town Puzzle: Class, Politics and Migration in the Informal Food Economy
African Human Mobility Review
informal economy; political rights; economic and social rights; development; South Africa
title Solving the Cape Town Puzzle: Class, Politics and Migration in the Informal Food Economy
title_full Solving the Cape Town Puzzle: Class, Politics and Migration in the Informal Food Economy
title_fullStr Solving the Cape Town Puzzle: Class, Politics and Migration in the Informal Food Economy
title_full_unstemmed Solving the Cape Town Puzzle: Class, Politics and Migration in the Informal Food Economy
title_short Solving the Cape Town Puzzle: Class, Politics and Migration in the Informal Food Economy
title_sort solving the cape town puzzle class politics and migration in the informal food economy
topic informal economy; political rights; economic and social rights; development; South Africa
url http://www.epubs.ac.za/index.php/ahmr/article/view/2440
work_keys_str_mv AT graemeyoung solvingthecapetownpuzzleclasspoliticsandmigrationintheinformalfoodeconomy