商品簡介
Occupational change is generally assumed to accompany development and to be a necessary part of achieving improved standards of living. But occupational change goes beyond individuals' economic activities and income-earning to redefine their social identity and contribute fundamentally to the reconfiguration of the ethicla foundations of local communities and nation states. The search for alternative, vialble livelihoods in times of economic crisis involves age-old occupational pursuits and work hierarchies eroding and new occupational identities and ethics coalescing. Social trust is put to the test novel work situations and mobility patterns emerge.
How Africa Works identifies the influence of changing work modes on the moral economy and social dynamics of the continent. Probing how occupational change alters identity and moulds consensus towards a new social morality, this book challenges the view that development is secured through a market or alternatively a state-led path. Case studies reveal a wealth of insights into the interaction between states, markets, communities and households, and illustrate how material reality and ethical values transform in unexpected ways.
How Africa Works in important reading for academics and students of development studies and for policy makers. Deborah Fahy Bryceson is Reading in Urban Studies, Department of Geographical and Earth Sciences, University of Glasgow, UK and Principle of The Policy Practice.
`This book, rich in well-grounded case studies on work in different parts of Africa, makes a sustained and compelling case for taking seariously the making of occupational identities.'Francis B. Nyamnjoh, Professor of Social Anthropology, University of Cape Town
`A valuale collection of reflective studies of occupational identity in Africa. Africa has much to teach the rest of the world.' Guy Standing, Professor of Economic Security, University of Bath and Co-President, Basic Income Earth Network (BIEN)
`This is a must read for anyone who genuinely needs to understand how work is valued - and thus practised-in various African occupational setting.' Chambi Chachage, independent researcher, newspaper columnist and policy analyst
`An important contribution to African studies, one which should be read by others interested in changing occupations, identities and moralities everywhere' Pat Caplan, Goldsmiths College, London