DOI: 10.14264/uql.2018.360
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Who Governs the 'Ungovernable'? Examining Governing Relations in Urban Informality

Abstract: For several decades now, Metro Manila's Baclaran district has been home to thousands of street vendors who have capitalised on its functions as a commercial centre, a transport node, and a Filipino Catholic devotional site. This presence of informal hawkers, which some government officials consider as an urban blight, has generated a range of policies that seek to manage, if not eradicate, the informal hawkers. Years of street occupancy, however, have enabled the tenacious vendors to enforce grassroots mechani… Show more

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Cited by 2 publications
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“…Based on the conceptual and empirical insights presented in the previous section, we employ a post-dualist approach (Recio, Mateo-Babiano, & Roitman, 2017;Recio, 2018) to analyse how urban informality issues like street vending are linked to transport and land use. A post-dualist framing builds on an enmeshed reading of informality issues, evident in the work of Roy (2005), Yiftachel (2006), Donovan (2008), Porter (2011), andDovey (2012).…”
Section: Street Vending Transport and Land Use In The Global Southmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Based on the conceptual and empirical insights presented in the previous section, we employ a post-dualist approach (Recio, Mateo-Babiano, & Roitman, 2017;Recio, 2018) to analyse how urban informality issues like street vending are linked to transport and land use. A post-dualist framing builds on an enmeshed reading of informality issues, evident in the work of Roy (2005), Yiftachel (2006), Donovan (2008), Porter (2011), andDovey (2012).…”
Section: Street Vending Transport and Land Use In The Global Southmentioning
confidence: 99%