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      Social Protection and Informal Workers in Sub-Saharan Africa
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      Book

      Social Protection and Informal Workers in Sub-Saharan Africa

      DOI link for Social Protection and Informal Workers in Sub-Saharan Africa

      Social Protection and Informal Workers in Sub-Saharan Africa book

      Lived Realities and Associational Experiences from Kenya and Tanzania

      Social Protection and Informal Workers in Sub-Saharan Africa

      DOI link for Social Protection and Informal Workers in Sub-Saharan Africa

      Social Protection and Informal Workers in Sub-Saharan Africa book

      Lived Realities and Associational Experiences from Kenya and Tanzania
      Edited ByLone Riisgaard, Winnie Mitullah, Nina Torm
      Edition 1st Edition
      First Published 2021
      eBook Published 25 November 2021
      Pub. Location London
      Imprint Routledge
      DOI https://doi.org/10.4324/9781003173694
      Pages 274
      eBook ISBN 9781003173694
      Subjects Development Studies, Environment, Social Work, Urban Studies, Economics, Finance, Business & Industry, Geography, Global Development, Social Sciences
      OA Funder Roskilde University
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      Riisgaard, L., Mitullah, W., & Torm, N. (Eds.). (2021). Social Protection and Informal Workers in Sub-Saharan Africa: Lived Realities and Associational Experiences from Kenya and Tanzania (1st ed.). Routledge. https://doi.org/10.4324/9781003173694

      ABSTRACT

      The promotion of social protection in Sub-Saharan Africa happens in a context where informal labour markets constitute the norm, and where most workers live uncertain livelihoods with very limited access to official social protection. The dominant social protection agenda and the associated literature come with an almost exclusive focus on donor and state programmes even if their coverage is limited to small parts of the populations – and in no way stands measure to the needs. In these circumstances, people depend on other means of protection and cushioning against risks and vulnerabilities including different forms of collective self-organizing providing alternative forms of social protection. These informal, bottom-up forms of social protection are at a nascent stage of social protection discussions and little is known about the extent or models of these informal mechanisms.

      This book seeks to fill this gap by focusing on three important sectors of informal work, namely: transport, construction, and micro-trade in Kenya and Tanzania. It explores how the global social protection agenda interacts with informal contexts and how it fits with the actual realities of the informal workers. Consequently, the authors examine and compare the social protection models conceptualized and implemented ‘from above’ by the public authorities in Tanzania and Kenya with social protection mechanisms ‘from below’ by the informal workers own collective associations.

      The book will be of interest to academics in International Development Studies, Political Economy, and African Studies, as well as development practitioners and policy communities.

      TABLE OF CONTENTS

      chapter |30 pages

      Introduction

      ByLone Riisgaard, Nina Torm, Winnie Mitullah

      Size: 0.21 MB

      chapter 2|17 pages

      Formal social protection and informal workers in Kenya and Tanzania

      From residual towards universal models?
      ByNina Torm, Godbertha Kinyondo, Winnie Mitullah, Lone Riisgaard

      Size: 0.13 MB

      chapter 3|23 pages

      The relationship between association membership and access to formal social protection

      A cross-sector analysis of informal workers in Kenya and Tanzania
      ByNina Torm

      Size: 0.18 MB

      chapter 4|28 pages

      Self-regulating informal transport workers and the quest for social protection in Tanzania

      ByGodbertha Kinyondo

      Size: 0.23 MB

      chapter 5|23 pages

      Informal transport worker organizations and social protection provision in Kenya

      ByAnne W. Kamau

      Size: 0.17 MB

      chapter 6|25 pages

      Informal trader associations in Tanzania – providing limited but much-needed informal social protection

      ByLone Riisgaard

      Size: 0.37 MB

      chapter 7|25 pages

      Access to social protection in Kenya

      The role of micro-traders' associations
      ByRaphael Indimuli

      Size: 0.28 MB

      chapter 8|25 pages

      Social protection and informal construction worker organizations in Tanzania

      How informal worker organizations strive to provide social insurance to their members
      ByAloyce Gervas

      Size: 1.99 MB

      chapter 9|23 pages

      Construction workers in Kenya

      Straddling with formal and informal social protection models
      ByWinnie Mitullah

      Size: 0.21 MB

      chapter 10|20 pages

      Convergence and divergence of workers' environment, associations, and access to social protection

      Sectoral and country comparisons
      ByWinnie Mitullah, Lone Riisgaard, Nina Torm, Aloyce Gervas, Raphael Indimuli, Anne W. Kamau, Godbertha Kinyondo

      Size: 0.14 MB

      chapter 11|13 pages

      Concluding reflections

      ByLone Riisgaard, Winnie Mitullah, Nina Torm

      Size: 0.10 MB
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