The embeddedness of ethnic minority business activity is widely accepted, as researchers increasingly eschew ethno-culturalist explanations of the phenomenon. However, despite the importance of urban processes, studies of ethnic minority enterprise are often 'spaceless'. This article uses Rekers and van Kempen's urban spatial framework to assess the experiences of South Asian owners in Birmingham's restaurant industry. One taken-for-granted but evidently important element to which this article draws attention is location, which emerges as one of the key points of differentiation within the ethnic business community. Location is seen to influence individual access to market potential, an unevenly distributed resource largely shaped by local social geography. At the same time, entry into more lucrative market niches is heavily dependent on the possession of other resources such as capital, information and in some instances management skills. Copyright Joint Editors and Blackwell Publishers Ltd 2002.
The often-dynamic presence of South Asians in particular economic activities has prompted ambivalent responses from policymakers. For some, there is encouragement to``break out'' from ethnic niche businesses like lower-order retailing and catering. Another ploy is to promote a strategy of```ethnic advantage'' by exploiting``cultural'' features of a particular community. Examples include the marketing of what can be termed``ethnic enclaves'' likè`C hinatown'' in Manchester and``Little Italy'' in Boston (USA). This paper reports on an initiative to exploit the tourist potential of South Asian cuisine by developing a``Balti Quarter'' in Birmingham. The results highlight a number of key issues involved in operationalising this increasingly popular strategy. First, the unitarist conceptualisation of the notion of an ethnic enclave obscures the harshly competitive environment that small ethnic minority firms like those in the``Balti Quarter'' have to operate in. Second, the often ad hoc way in which such inner city areas are regulated (through planning guidelines) can intensify the competitive pressures facing many firms in the area. Finally, the``external'' focus of the initiative runs the risk of masking chronic issues within the firm (e.g. poor working environments) which policymakers should be equally concerned with.This research was undertaken in conjunction with Cooper Simms Research and Evaluation. Their contribution to the project is gratefully acknowledged. Currying favourwith the locals 43 and sectoral milieu. Indeed, such observations were noted in the first British study of ethnic minority firms, which involved Asian and white shopkeepers (
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Purpose -The purpose of this paper is to examine how illegal settlers and poor families struggle for basic necessities through land invasions, covert practices and illegal sabotage, examining how fundamental rights to subsistence and dignity are superior to private property claims. Design/methodology/approach -The paper combines two qualitative research projects that examined property rights in Kyrgyzstan, conducting semi-structured interviews with poor groups, elites and state officials. One project was conducted between 2009-2010, examining two illegal settlements and a squatted building in the capital Bishkek, and the other project took place between 2007-2008 in four villages in Osh region. Findings -It was found that illegal settlers and poor families deliberate upon the moral aspects of land and property, though sometimes their judgements are distorted by nationalist feelings and racialised identities. Poor and propertyless groups struggle for basic necessities, lacking access to social rights and facing class contempt and state coercion.Research limitations/implications -The authors criticise de Soto's ideas on legalising squatters' holdings, suggesting that his property rights approach to land offers a flawed moral vision for society and a mis-understanding of illegal settlements. Practical implications -International donors need to re-think development strategies for increasing growth and reducing poverty, and for Kyrgyzstan to abandon the national residential registration system ( propiska). Originality/value -The authors' moral responsibilities approach on property recognises the importance of land and valuable resources for human capabilities, the competing obligations of the state and the role of moral propriety and sentiments in shaping responsibilities towards vulnerable and poor groups.
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