Tug of war: street trading and city governance in Kumasi, Ghana

Kumasi, Ghana, has witnessed accelerated population growth in the past two decades, leading to a significant increase in joblessness following years of economic decline and labour market liberalisation. As a survival strategy, residents have resorted to street trading, making it an important source...

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Veröffentlicht in:Development in practice 2016-10, Vol.26 (7), p.906-919
Hauptverfasser: Owusu-Sekyere, Ebenezer, Amoah, Samuel Twumasi, Teng-Zeng, Frank
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creator Owusu-Sekyere, Ebenezer
Amoah, Samuel Twumasi
Teng-Zeng, Frank
description Kumasi, Ghana, has witnessed accelerated population growth in the past two decades, leading to a significant increase in joblessness following years of economic decline and labour market liberalisation. As a survival strategy, residents have resorted to street trading, making it an important source of livelihood. However, its associated implications for urban governance and management has placed city authorities in the spotlight over the years. Examining the daily struggles that occur between city managers and street traders, this article finds that various strategies adopted by city authorities to decongest the streets have proved futile. Rethinking what could be a sustainable strategy for decongesting the streets of traders, the article concludes that chasing the traders out of the streets is not the panacea to solving the problem unless well coordinated land-use planning and appropriate regulations are competently enforced.
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source Applied Social Sciences Index & Abstracts (ASSIA); Jstor Complete Legacy; PAIS Index
subjects Cities
City managers
Conflict and reconstruction - Forced displacement
Economic decline
Governance
Governance and public policy
Labor market
Land use planning
Livelihood
Population growth
Regulation
Residents
Street traders
Sub-Saharan Africa
Trading
title Tug of war: street trading and city governance in Kumasi, Ghana
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