Many of Bolivia's poorest and most vulnerable citizens work as vendors in the Cancha mega-market in the city of Cochabamba, where they must navigate systems of informality and illegality in order to survive. In ...

Buy Now From Amazon

Many of Bolivia's poorest and most vulnerable citizens work as vendors in the Cancha mega-market in the city of Cochabamba, where they must navigate systems of informality and illegality in order to survive. In Owners of the Sidewalk Daniel M. Goldstein examines the ways these systems correlate in the marginal spaces of the Latin American city. Collaborating with the Cancha's legal and permanent stall vendors (fijos) and its illegal and itinerant street and sidewalk vendors (ambulantes), Goldstein shows how the state's deliberate neglect and criminalization of the Cancha's poor—a practice common to neoliberal modern cities—makes the poor exploitable, governable, and consigns them to an insecure existence. Goldstein's collaborative and engaged approach to ethnographic field research also opens up critical questions about what ethical scholarship entails.
 
 


Similar Products

Regulating Style: Intellectual Property Law and the Business of Fashion in GuatemalaThe Land of Open Graves: Living and Dying on the Migrant Trail (California Series in Public Anthropology)Exiled Home: Salvadoran Transnational Youth in the Aftermath of Violence (Global Insecurities)A Century of Violence in a Red City: Popular Struggle, Counterinsurgency, and Human Rights in ColombiaIn Search of Paradise: Middle-Class Living in a Chinese MetropolisThunder Shaman: Making History with Mapuche Spirits in Chile and PatagoniaPlanet of SlumsSweetness and Power: The Place of Sugar in Modern History