Between the state and the street : experiences of bureaucracy

Loading...
Thumbnail Image

Date

Authors

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

University of Pretoria

Abstract

The management of informality by the state has a long and complicated history in Johannesburg. This dissertation deals with one recent element of that history: the relationship between informal street traders and the City of Johannesburg municipal government (the City). In a 2013 effort to rid Johannesburg’s inner city of ‘crime and grime’, the City evicted in the region of 8 000 street traders from their businesses, and kept them off the street for three months. The mass eviction, dubbed ‘Operation Clean Sweep’, eventually made its way before the Constitutional Court, where the City was lambasted for its actions and ordered to allow street traders to resume their trade. In the years that have followed, the relationship between the City and street traders has been characterised by impasse. The aim of this dissertation is to probe how bureaucracy works in people’s lives by exploring what Operation Clean Sweep and its aftermath reveal about the relationship between Johannesburg street traders and the local state. As a result, it fits into the developing literature on what has been called the ‘human economy’ (Hart 2004). Guided by various theoretical perspectives on both of the conceptual poles of the relationship – the ‘state’ and the ‘informal sector’ – and drawing on ethnographic material from my time as an employee at an NGO heavily involved in the developing relationship between street traders and the City in the wake of Operation Clean Sweep, the dissertation sheds light on aspects of the relationship until now largely absent in the literature on Johannesburg street trade. The findings of the dissertation ultimately suggest that systems in what are often understood as unordered ‘informal’ contexts, and deeply personal and contingent aspects of the City’s formal bureaucracy, are central to understanding this relationship. The Johannesburg street economy represents an immediate exposure of the ways in which impersonal market exchanges are possible only through the continual eruption and control of the social and personal (Hart 2001). The dissertation reveals some of the informal arrangements that have developed in a general absence of effective management by the state. These include practices of reciprocity intimately shaped by the street economy (Sahlins 1972), and the careful management of the visibility of economic success, which often threatens the survival of reciprocity among street traders, and therefore the survival of informal businesses themselves. The state’s management of street trade, which has recently sought to impose modernist schemes on the inner city, is produced from a complex interplay of, among others, the state’s relationship with powerful elite property interests (Harvey 2009), the personal motivations and experiences of bureaucrats, and a push to render street traders legible (Scott 1998). This legibility is, however, not achieved through the conventional devices of documentation and enumeration, but instead through the development of a grammar of aesthetics (Ghertner 2011).

Description

Dissertation (MSocSci)--University of Pretoria, 2017.

Keywords

Unrestricted, UCTD

Sustainable Development Goals

Citation

Webster, DE 2017, Between the state and the street: Experiences of bureaucracy, MSocSci Dissertation, University of Pretoria, Pretoria, viewed yymmdd <http://hdl.handle.net/2263/67956>