Informal work in downtown public spaces of Sao Paulo city: thinking public policies references / Trabalho informal nos espaços públicos no centro de São Paulo: pensando parâmetros para políticas públicas
AUTOR(ES)
Luciana Fukimoto Itikawa
DATA DE PUBLICAÇÃO
2006
RESUMO
Five hypotheses explain streetvending in downtown Sao Paulo as a precarious and a vulnerable occupation: 1- Structural impermeability of formal labor market: informal sector as a global process, and as a permanent exception in brazilian capitalism; 2- Lack of awareness of streetvending as a production of urban space: transformation of spatial attributes - profit, competitiveness, ownership, etc.; 3- Opportunist exploitation over clandestine street vendors: corruption and patronage; 4- Urban marketing strategies and Spatial segregation: partnership among government, ruling elite and multi-lateral financial agencies in order to improve urban renewal, frequently isolate and gentrify against street vendors; 5- Innefective public policies - lack of understanding of streetvending results in unlikely public policies. Assuming these hypotheses, this research built public policies directions in order to overcome contradiction between intolerance and permissiveness.
ASSUNTO(S)
spatial segregation trabalho de rua clandestinity segregação espacial clandestinidade street vendor camelô economia informal informal economy street vending
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