Pursuing aspirations for decent sanitation work
- Autor(en)
- Julian Walker, Adriana Allen, Ibrahim Bakarr Bangura, Pascale Hofmann, Wilbard Kombe, Nelly Leblond, Tatu Mtwangi Limbumba, Catarina Simoes Mavila Magaia, Claudy Vouhé, Julia Wesely
- Abstrakt
This chapter provides a gendered understanding of how the ‘rules’ governing sanitation practices and work (ranging across laws, bylaws, and social norms) affect the realisation of aspirations for decent work expressed by off-grid sanitation workers. We draw on our research in three African cities (Beira in Mozambique, Freetown in Sierra Leone, and Mwanza in Tanzania) with women and men involved in paid and unpaid sanitation work. Our analysis highlights that formal law-based rules are biased towards ‘modern’ grid systems and simultaneously over-regulate and exclude off-grid paid sanitation workers, making their livelihoods ‘undecent’ (impossible, arduous, under-rewarded), while under-regulating unpaid sanitation work (predominantly performed by women), thereby reinforcing their invisibility and lack of protection. In contrast, community-based bylaws often enable the livelihoods of off-grid sanitation workers and the de facto practices that meet the sanitation needs of the majority of African urban dwellers, while not always advancing safe and healthy working conditions. In this context, we explore how sanitation workers actively negotiate and use these different systems of rules to pursue their aspirations for decent work, in ways which range from coping mechanisms to more transformative strategies, often through collective action.
- Organisation(en)
- Institut für Geographie und Regionalforschung
- Externe Organisation(en)
- University College London, University of Sierra Leone, Ardhi University, Ben Gurion University of the Negev, Universidade de Lisboa, Unknown External Organisation Unbekannt/undefiniert
- Seiten
- 205-228
- Anzahl der Seiten
- 24
- DOI
- https://doi.org/10.4324/9781003384816
- Publikationsdatum
- 2024
- Peer-reviewed
- Ja
- ÖFOS 2012
- 509001 Aktionsforschung
- ASJC Scopus Sachgebiete
- Allgemeine Sozialwissenschaften, Economics, Econometrics and Finance(all), Allgemeine Erdkunde und Planetologie
- Sustainable Development Goals
- SDG 6 – Sauberes Wasser und Sanitäreinrichtungen, SDG 8 – Menschenwürdige Arbeit und Wirtschaftswachstum, SDG 5 – Geschlechtergleichheit, SDG 11 – Nachhaltige Städte und Gemeinden
- Link zum Portal
- https://ucrisportal.univie.ac.at/de/publications/5b4aec3b-7bcd-4844-aa91-d12c781d96e2