Make your work easier and more efficient installing the rrojasdatabank  toolbar ( you can customize it ) in your browser. 
Counter visits from more than 160  countries and 1400 universities (details)

The political economy of development
This academic site promotes excellence in teaching and researching economics and development, and the advancing of describing, understanding, explaining and theorizing.
About us- Castellano- Français - Dedication
Home- Themes- Reports- Statistics/Search- Lecture notes/News- People's Century- Puro Chile- Mapuche


World indicators on the environmentWorld Energy Statistics - Time SeriesEconomic inequality


The urban challenge in Africa: Growth and management of its large cities
Edited by Carole Rakodi - United Nations University Press - TOKYO - NEW YORK - PARIS - © The United Nations University, 1997

Contents - Previous - Next


Urban cultivation

One key facet of informalization, widely present in African cities, is the expansion of "urban cultivation," which takes place through the proliferation of agricultural micro-enterprise (Stern, 1992a). As Drakakis-Smith (1994) points out, urban agriculture is extensive in much of Africa partially as a consequence of the limitations imposed on the development of an "informal economy of growth" or on the operations and livelihoods of survivalist enterprise. In policy circles a re-thinking is occurring on the role of urban agriculture in Africa and of its potential contribution to feeding the cities as a broader element of sustainable economic development (Rogerson, 1992b, 1993b; Mbiba, 1995). Indeed, Wekwete (1992, p. 131) is emphatic that "urban farming has become a critical variable in sustainability."

Although "urban agriculture" is a new concept in African development policy and planning, it must be acknowledged that the cultivation of "food crops within the overall boundaries of towns and cities is not new," although in the 1960s and 1970s it was forgotten or largely ignored by researchers and local policy makers (Rakodi, 1988a, p. 495). With the impact of economic recession, the effects of Structural Adjustment Programmes, and the crises of the 1980s and 1990s, the cultivation of food crops in public and private open spaces is now both more widespread and economically significant in many African urban areas (Sanyal, 1985; Tricaud, 1987; Drakakis-Smith, 1991, 1994; Lee, 1993a,b,c). At certain periods of the year, especially the seasonal rainfall peak, "many urban centres are transformed by armies of 'urban farmers' tilling the open spaces to produce flourishing vegetable gardens and fields of grains and fruit" (Lado, 1990, p. 257). It was revealed from surveys conducted in the late 1980s in Kenya, Egypt, Mali, and Tanzania that poor urban households spent around 60 per cent - and in some cases as much as 89 per cent - of their incomes on food (Mougeot, 1993a, p. 1). Moreover, price surveys disclosed that city dwellers paid 10-30 per cent more for their food than rural inhabitants did (Mougeot, 1993a). Accordingly, the "push" of worsening food insecurity underpins much of the burgeoning of agricultural micro-enterprises on the African city-scape, particularly since the late 1970s.

In contemporary Africa, urban cultivation is a widespread activity that is becoming a permanent part of the landscape in most large cities. In spatial terms the two main areas of cultivation are in home gardens (on-plot cultivation) or at the urban periphery (off-plot cultivation) (Drakakis-Smith, 1994; Mbiba, 1994). The most dramatic manifestation of self-production of food is, perhaps, the practice of keeping livestock fed on domestic refuse on the rooftops of buildings in Cairo; for the early 1980s, it was noted that Egypt's capital city had at least 80,000 households raising animals at home (Khouri-Dagher, 1986, p. 41). By the 1990s it could be observed by Freeman (1991, p. 2) that "urban agriculture is both prevalent and economically significant" across Africa. Likewise, another researcher describes urban farming as "a ubiquitous, complex and dynamic feature of the urban and socio-economic landscape in Africa" (Lachance, 1993, p. 8). During the era of late apartheid the spread of urban cultivation practices began to extend to the cities of South Africa (Rogerson, 1993c). Accelerating city growth after the removal of influx control measures, escalating levels of food inflation, and the reduced absorptive capacity of a sanctions-weakened formal economy together triggered the appearance of cultivation on vacant land fringing the formal African townships and especially around the country's mushrooming informal shack settlements (Rogerson, 1993c; May and Rogerson, 1995).

For the early 1980s Guyer (1987, p. 13) estimates between 10 and 25 per cent of the total urban population in Africa "may be involved in some sort of agriculture." Recent evidence suggests that overall participation rates may be considerably higher. For example, it was pointed out that in Kenya and Tanzania "two out of three urban families are engaged in farming" (Smit and Nasr, 1992, p. 142). In Tanzania, "every open space, utility service reserve, road, valley or garden in the towns has been taken up for planting of all sorts of seasonal and permanent crops, ranging from vegetables, maize, bananas, to fruit trees" (Mosha, 1991, p. 84). The rapid pace of growth in urban cultivation is evidenced particularly by data from Dar es Salaam, where in 1980 44 per cent of low-income earners had farms but by 1987 "70 per cent of heads of households engaged in some farming or husbandry" (Mougeot, 1993b, p. 3).

The widespread expansion in farming as both a part-time and a full-time occupation for African urban households has been tracked in several investigations. Broadly speaking, Sanyal (1986, p. 22) asserts that "insufficient income is a primary cause for the practice of urban cultivation" in Africa. Urban research in East and Central Africa suggests that the invasion of cities by subsistence cultivation is symptomatic of economic collapse in urban Zaire (Ngub'usim and Streiffeler, 1982; Streiffeler, 1987), Uganda (Amis, 1992; Bibangambah, 1992), and Tanzania (Mlozi et al., 1992). Kinshasa was described recently as "a giant garden plot - by every roadside, on traffic islands and roundabouts, cassava leaves sprout in lovingly tended rows" (The Economist, 1994, p. 59). Household survival in Uganda depends on multiple income sources, including urban farming (Amis, 1992, p. 6; Lee, 1993b, p. 10); in Kampala, where besides the city centre "most empty spaces are covered by perennial crops," it is observed that "one gets the feeling that the rural sector is overtaking the city instead of the reverse" (Bigsten and Kayizzi-Mugerwa, 1992, p. 1436). Even in Nairobi there is a considerable body of evidence to confirm that informal urban cultivation of open space is markedly on the increase in this so-termed "city of farmers" (Lado, 1990; Freeman, 1991). It has been remarked that "there are few areas of the city of Nairobi where the activities of urban farmers cannot be observed" (Freeman, 1991, p. 2). A similar march of urban cultivation has been noted in West Africa (Tricaud, 1987; Lachance, 1993). On the outskirts of Lagos, "the putrid jungles bordering the highways into the city have fallen under cultivation" by part-time farmers, including Nigeria's professional classes (Mustapha, 1991, p. 13). Gefu (1992) argues that the escalation in part-time farming in urban Nigeria represents a survival strategy for many urban wage-earners to supplement declining real wages in the wake of structural adjustment measures. Economic crisis and structural adjustment in Nigeria fostered the development of multiple modes of social livelihood, and many public servants moonlight as part-time urban cultivators (Mustapha, 1991, p. 13). Likewise, with a declining formal economy in Tanzania, the inability of households to live on a single income source has precipitated an expansion in urban farming (Mosha, 1991).

In southern African cities the phenomenon of urban agriculture has been widely documented. Lesotho's capital, Maseru, exhibits a diverse range of agricultural pursuits, with dairy cows, maize production, sheep- and pig-rearing, and vegetable and fruit production all being "prominent and conspicuous activities" (Mbiba, 1994, p. 192). Around metropolitan Durban in South Africa it was disclosed that 25 per cent of households were cultivating a garden for subsistence food production (May and Rogerson, 1995). In Harare, home gardens act as a vital source of subsistence food production for the city's poorest populations (Drakakis-Smith and Kivell, 1990; Drakakis-Smith, 1992a). Since the mid-1970s a substantial extension of informal "off-plot" cultivation has taken place in the shallow valleys occupying this city's periphery (Mazambani, 1982, 1986; Mbiba, 1994). Significantly, the expansion of cultivation in the urban periphery of Harare has been at the expense of the destruction of woodlands used for fuelwood (Mazambani, 1986). Thus, paradoxically, "increasing amounts of the food grown in the pert-urban area is [sic] being sold either through the petty-commodity market (as cooked or fresh food) or to government marketing agencies in order to obtain cash for the purposes of purchasing commercially marketed fuelwood or kerosene" (Drakakis-Smith, n.d., p. 9).

Despite a "spectacular expansion" observed in pert-urban agriculture in Harare (Drakakis-Smith, n.d., p. 8), urban cultivation reaches its most striking extent in the case of the "garden city" of Lusaka. In Zambia's capital city, nearly 60 per cent of low-income households are estimated as cultivating food gardens (Sanyal, 1985, 1986). The pace of expansion of urban agriculture in Lusaka has been so extensive that the city has been described as "the world capital of urban cultivation" (Sanyal, 1986, p. 7). In the words of Sanyal:

It was February and Lusaka looked abundant. The rainy season was just over and bright yellow sunlight touched the edges of dark green maize plants which had sprung up all over the city. There were maize plants outside the Lusaka International Airport, standing in contrast to the purple bougainvillea which had been carefully planted by the Department of Public Works to welcome the dignatories of an International Conference. Maize plants grew all along the edges of the Great East Road - the thoroughfare connecting the airport, the university, the National Assembly building and the central business district. Even outside the boundary walls of the elegantly designed Hotel Intercontinental, maize grew in abundance.

The abundance of maize plants was not only confined to the "official areas" of Lusaka. Hidden from the main thoroughfares of Great East Road and Great North Road, the squatter communities... looked lush and green with only small mud houses reminding one of habitation. There was maize in front of the mud houses and around the periphery of the communities: there were large banana trees around the rickety structures of pit latrines. Pumpkin leaves covered low fences that separated unfriendly neighbors; and tomatoes and ground nuts grew in front of the houses where women sat together washing dishes and lighting fires. (Sanyal, 1986, pp. 1-2)

The advance of urban cultivation and its growing significance throughout African cities has occurred much to the surprise and embarrassment of proponents of modernization, ranging from city officials to international aid donors (Sanyal, 1985). Contrary to popular opinion, this process of the "ruralization" of African cities is not the consequence of mass rural-urban migration. Sanyal (1987, p. 198) interprets the post-1980 upsurge of cultivation by the urban poor in Africa as an innovative response from below to the decline of formal urban economies; this response "reduces their vulnerability to the fluctuations of fortune that currently beset the economies of developing countries' cities." The findings of research on urban farmers in Nairobi and Lusaka demonstrate clearly that "urban cultivation is not practiced exclusively or even primarily by recent migrants" (Sanyal, 1985, p. 18). Instead, the majority of farmers originate from poor households that are fully entrenched in the urban economy. More than 60 per cent of Lusaka's farmers had been in the city for more than five years before embarking on plot gardens and nearly 45 per cent for more than 10 years (Mougeot, 1993b, p. 4). A profile of urban cultivators in Kenya shows that "average length of urban farmers' residence was 20.4 years, 85% had resided in the city for at least five years, 57.5% had been living there for 15 years or more, while 15% had dwelt there for more than 40 years" (Lado, 1990, p. 262). Cultivation taking place in Harare is primarily conducted by low-income families who grow food crops for domestic consumption and sale (Mazambani, 1982, 1986; Drakakis-Smith, 1992a; Mbiba, 1994, 1995). In Nairobi, the vast majority of cultivated plots "are creations of the very poor, and represent a major source of subsistence for the urban underclasses" (Freeman, 1991, p. 87). Research on urban cultivation in Kenya, Zambia, and Zimbabwe underscores the vital role of women as major food producers (Rakodi, 1988a,b; Lado, 1990; Stren, 1992a; Mbiba, 1994, 1995). In particular, Stren (1991) records the findings of a study in which the majority of women urban farmers in Kenya said they would starve or suffer considerably without urban agriculture. In Lusaka, farming is a particularly important survival activity for groups of low-income women with limited schooling or marketable skills in the formal economy (Rakodi, 1985, 1988a,b).

Although for much of Africa the produce and revenues of urban agriculture constitute a much-needed source of income and nutrition for the urban poor, especially for the growing numbers of female-headed households, it must be acknowledged that "in some cities much of the food produced is not grown by the poor" (Drakakis-Smith, 1992b, p. 47). The participation of middle-income households in urban food production has been a notable finding of research undertaken in Nigeria (Gefu, 1992), Mozambique (Sheldon, 1991), and South Africa (May and Rogerson, 1995). Indeed, in Durban, participation in cultivation was evenly spread among seven different kinds of household, with the smallest proportions of farmers drawn from the poorest and the wealthiest groups of households (May and Rogerson, 1995). This situation suggests that the "ability of a household to produce food is inevitably a function of its control over basic inputs such as land, labour and capital, together with some influence with the urban authorities which usually have the power to prevent if they wish, much of this activity" (Drakakis-Smith, 1993, p. 205). Such findings underscore the complexities of urban farming in Africa (Drakakis-Smith, 1992b, p. 49). None the less, they do not support the proposition that urban agriculture in Africa is merely a last resort for the poor in urban areas, albeit subsistence food production admittedly does represent one important survival niche adopted by the most vulnerable urban households.

Across urban Africa, official reactions to urban cultivation have varied across space and time but have tended to be inhibitive rather than accommodative (Drakakis-Smith, 1993, 1994; Rogerson, 1993b; Mbiba, 1994, 1995). The advance of urban cultivation has occurred often in the face of negative actions by African local authorities. Despite its widespread occurrence for subsistence consumption, urban food and livestock production "is usually not appreciated by urban authorities and certainly not planned for and supported" (Lee-Smith and Trujillo, 1992, p. 79). Moreover, as Lee-Smith and Stren (1991, p. 33) observe, "neither land-use planning nor urban management are traditionally geared to coping with urban food production." Repressive attitudes towards urban agriculture appear to be particularly common in the former colonial-settler regions of east, central, and southern Africa. For example, urban authorities in Kenya perceive informal cultivation as part of the broader embarrassment of the informal sector, a blot on the city landscape, "a continuous but unwelcome reminder that programmes for development and efforts to project an aura of modernity and progress have not reached very far below the surface" (Freeman, 1991, p. 44). State repression in Lusaka took the form of destroying plants on the grounds that urban cultivation was a "health hazard" linked to an increased incidence of malaria (Sanyal, 1986, 1987). None the less, by the 1980s, as national indebtedness increased, a reversal in policy attitudes took place, with the Zambian state shifting to a position of urging people to grow their own vegetables and cereals. In Zimbabwe, urban managers consider uncontrolled cultivation to be "trivial or a nuisance," and periodic repressive measures are enacted to destroy crops (Mbiba, 1994, p. 200).

Benign neglect of urban farming is a common official stance in much of Africa; typically, regulations in Uganda ban cultivation in the city but in practice most farming in the cities is widely tolerated (Lee, 1993b, p. 11). Only in Mozambique, Zaire, Malawi, and Nigeria are there signs that official authorities have come out tentatively in favour of urban farming, introducing enabling measures to enhance the prospects for cultivation (UNCHS, 1991, p. 23; Assuncao, 1993, p. 35; Lachance, 1993, p. 8). A negative policy environment towards urban cultivation is regrettable, given that ecologically sustainable urbanization in Africa will be impossible without the activities and contributions of urban farming towards resource recycling, food production, and job creation (Rogerson, 1992b; Smit and Nasr, 1992; Wekwete, 1992; Drakakis-Smith, 1994). Nevertheless, important recent research on the environmental effects of uncontrolled urban cultivation in Harare points to the need for policy formulation to minimize the effects of variously a changing hydrological regime, soil loss, chemical pollution, and vegetative change (Bowyer-Bower and Tengbeh, 1995).

Concluding remarks

It has been argued in this chapter that the economies of large African cities can be interpreted to a large extent as a product of the simultaneous unfolding and impact of processes of globalization and informalization. These processes are producing a complex set of policy challenges that demand urgent attention at all levels of government. Nevertheless, it must be acknowledged that in the current context of global restructuring, economic development increasingly has become a localized phenomenon (Storper, 1992; Ettlinger, 1994). This points to potentially new and important roles for the local governments of Africa's large cities in confronting the economic challenges of the next decade.

As emphasized within the body of writings on "urban management," the conventional roles assumed by African city governments (and more particularly by urban managers) have centred around issues of prevention and control of development rather than the active promotion of economic development (see Stren, 1992b, 1993; Wekwete, chap. 15 in this volume). In the 1990s there is an urgent need for a redirection of urban management programmes "to provide the necessary framework in which urban economic development can take place, and to facilitate the provision of opportunities for the widest range of income generating activities" (Devas, 1989, pp. 5-6). Indeed, throughout urban Africa one essential future task for urban management is taking up the challenge of promoting local urban economic development and of attracting new investment to cities rather than acting to prevent such development (see Devas and Rakodi, 1993). Currently, however, there are only a small number of functioning initiatives for local economic development in urban Africa. By far the most advanced initiatives for planning local urban economic development exist in South Africa's largest cities Johannesburg, Durban, and Cape Town. These have involved coherent sets of strategic interventions designed to improve the general economic performance of these cities as well as to enhance income opportunities for the urban poor (for details, see Rogerson, 1994b,d, 1995d). During the 1990s, the lessons of these ongoing South African initiatives may provide important pointers for other large African cities in tackling the policy challenges posed by "stalled globalization" and the march of informalization.

References

Abdel-Fadil, M. 1983. Informal Sector Employment in Egypt. International Labour Office, Geneva.

Aboagye, A. A. 1986. Informal Sector in Mogadishu: An Analysis of a Survey. ILO/Jobs and Skills Programme for Africa, Addis Ababa.

Aeroe, A. 1992. Rethinking Industrialization - From a National to a Local Perspective: A Case Study of the Industrialization Process in Tanzania with Particular Emphasis on the Construction Industry. Project Paper 92.3, Centre for Development Research, Copenhagen.

Aguilar, R. and M. Zejan. 1994. Income distribution and the labour market in Angola. Development Southern Africa 11: 341 -350.

Amis, P. 1992. Sustainable urban development and agriculture in Uganda. Paper 15 presented at the International Workshop on Planning for Sustainable Urban Development: Cities and Natural Resource Systems in Developing Countries, 1317 July, Cardiff.

Antony, E. 1989. Can the traditional crafts in Moroccan towns be assigned to the informal sector: The example of the mat weavers of Sale. Applied Geography and Development 33(2): 93-108.

Assuncao, P. 1993. Government Policies and the Urban Informal Sector in Sub-Saharan Africa: A Comparative Study on Kenya, Tanzania, Mozambique and Angola. WEP 2-19/WP.64, International Labour Office, Geneva.

Bibangambah, J. R. 1992. Macro-level constraints and the growth of the informal sector in Uganda. In: J. Baker and P. O. Pederson, eds., The Rural-Urban Interface in Africa: Expansion and Adaptation. Scandinavian Institute of African Studies, Uppsala, pp. 303-313.

Bigsten, A. and S. Kayizzi-Mugerwa. 1992. Adaption and distress in the urban economy: A study of Kampala households. World Development 2(): 1423-1441.

Bowyer-Bower, T. A. S. and G. Tengbeh. 1995. The environmental implications of (illegal) urban agriculture in Harare, Zimbabwe. Working Paper No. 4 of ODA Research Project R5946 presented at the Workshop on the Environmental, Social and Economic Impacts of (Illegal) Urban Agriculture in Harare, Zimbabwe, 3-31 August, University of Zimbabwe.

Castells, M. 1989. The Informational City. Blackwell, Oxford.

Castells, M. 1992. European Cities, the International Society, and the Global Economy. Centre for Metropolitan Research, University of Amsterdam.

Dawson, J. 1990. The impact of structural adjustment on the small enterprise sector: A comparison of the Ghanaian and Tanzanian experience. Unpublished paper prepared for the Conference on Small and Micro-scale Enterprise Promotion, 30 September 2 October, the Hague, the Netherlands.

Dawson, J. 1992. The relevance of the flexible specialization paradigm for small-scale industrial restructuring in Ghana. Bulletin, Institute of Development Studies 23(3): 34-38.

Devas, N. 1989. New Directions for Urban Planning and Management, Institute of Local Government Studies. Development Administration Group, Papers in the Administration of Development No. 34, University of Birmingham, Birmingham.

Devas, N. and C. Rakodi, eds. 1993. Managing Fast Growing Cities: New Approaches to Urban Planning and Management in the Developing World. Longman, London.

Dieleman, F. M. and C. Hamnett. 1994. Globalisation, regulation and the urban system: Editors' introduction to the special issue. Urban Studies 31:357-364.

Diemer, G. and E. C. W. van der Laan. 1981. The informal sector in historical perspective: The case of Tunis. Cultures et Développement 13: 161-172.

Dijk, M. P. van. 1993a. Industrial districts and urban economic development. Third World Planning Review 15: 175-186.

Dijk, M. P. van. 1993b. Small enterprises and the process of globalization and regional integration. Small Enterprise Development 4(3): 4-13.

Doohan, J. 1994. The jobless horizon: Unsettling prospects. World of Work 8: 2427.

Drakakis-Smith, D. n.d. The City Region: Basic Demands on the Urban Environs. Discussion Paper, Centre of Urban Studies and Urban Planning, University of Hong Kong.

Drakakis-Smith, D. 1991. Urban food distribution in Asia and Africa. Geographical Journal 157: 51-61.

Drakakis-Smith, D. 1992a. Strategies for meeting basic food needs in Harare. In: J. Baker and P. O. Pederson, eds., The Rural-Urban Interface in Africa: Expansion and Adaptation. Scandinavian Institute of African Studies, Uppsala, pp. 258-283.

Drakakis-Smith, D. 1992b. And the cupboard was bare: Food security and food policy for the urban poor. Geographical Journal of Zimbabwe 23: 38-58.

Drakakis-Smith, D. 1993. Food security and food policy for the urban poor. In: J. Dahl, D. Drakakis-Smith, and A. Narman, eds., Land, Food and Basic Needs in Developing Countries. Department of Human and Economic Geography, University of Gothenburg, Gothenburg, pp. 197-212.

Drakakis-Smith, D. 1994. Food systems and the poor in Harare under conditions of structural adjustment. Geografiska Annaler 76B: 3-20.

Drakakis-Smith, D. and P. T. Kivell. 1990. Urban food distribution and consumption: The case of Harare. In: A. M. Findlay, R. Paddison, and J. A. Dawson, eds., Retailing Environments in Developing Countries. Routledge, London, pp. 156-180.

Economist, The. 1994. The Zairean art of muddling through. 17 December.

Ettlinger, N. 1994. The localization of development in a comparative perspective. Economic Geography 70: 144-166.

Fapohunda, O. J. 1991. Retrenchment and Redeployment in the Public Sector of the Nigerian Economy. WEP 2-43/WP.51, International Labour Office, Geneva.

Findlay, A. M. and R. Paddison. 1986. Planning the Arab city: The cases of Tunis and Rabat. Progress in Planning 26(1): 1-82.

Fowler, D. A. 1981. The informal sector in Freetown: Opportunities for self-employment. In: S. V. Sethuraman, ed., The Urban Informal Sector in Developing Countries: Employment, Poverty and Environment. International Labour Office, Geneva, pp. 51-69.

Frayne, B. 1992. Urbanisation in Post-Independence Windhoek. Research Report No. 6, Namibian Institute for Social and Economic Research, Windhoek.

Freeman, D. B. 1991. A City of Farmers: Informal Urban Agriculture in the Open Spaces of Nairobi Kenya. McGill University Press, Montreal and Kingston.

Friedman, M. and M. Hambridge. 1991. The informal sector, gender and development. In: E. Preston-Whyte and C. Rogerson, eds., South Africa's Informal Economy. Oxford University Press, Cape Town, pp. 161-180.

Frohlich, C. and B. Frayne. 1991. Hawking: An "Informal" Sector Activity in Katutura, Windhoek. Discussion Paper No. 7, Namibian Institute of Social and Economic Research, Windhoek.

Gefu, J. O. 1992. Part-time farming as an urban survival strategy: A Nigerian case study. In: J. Baker and P. O. Pederson, eds., The Rural-Urban Interface in Africa: Expansion and Adaptation. Scandinavian Institute of African Studies, Uppsala, pp. 295-302.

Gilbert, A. 1994. Third world cities: Poverty, employment, gender roles and the environment during a time of restructuring. Urban Studies 31: 605-633.

Ginneken, W. van. 1988. Employment and labour incomes: A cross-country analysis (1971-86). In: W. van Ginneken, ed., Trends in Employment and Labour Incomes. International Labour Office, Geneva, pp. 1-31.

Guyer, J. I. 1987. Introduction. In: J. I. Guyer, ed., Feeding African Cities: Studies in Regional Social History. Manchester University Press, Manchester, pp. 1-54.

Hodd, M. 1993. Employment Planning within the Context of Economic Reforms: A Tanzanian Case Study. WEP 2-46/WP.44, International Labour Office, Geneva.

Hofmann, M. 1986. The informal sector in an intermediate city: A case in Egypt. Economic Development and Cultural Change 34: 263-277.

House, W. J., G. K. Ikiara, and D. McCormick. 1993. Urban self-employment in Kenya: Panacea or viable strategy? World Development 21: 1205-1223.

ILO. 1987. Sub-Saharan Africa. In: ILO, World Recession and Global Interdependence: Effects on Employment, Poverty and Policy Formation in Developing Countries. International Labour Office, Geneva, pp. 75-98.

ILO. 1991. The Urban Informal Sector in Africa in Retrospect and Prospect: An Annotated Bibliography. International Labour Bibliography No. 10, International Labour Office, Geneva.

ILO. 1992. World Labour Report 1992. International Labour Office, Geneva.

ILO. 1994a. World Labour Report 1994. International Labour Office, Geneva.

ILO. 1994b. Promoting Gender Equality in Employment in Lesotho: An Agenda for Action. Interdepartmental Project on Equality for Women in Employment, International Labour Office, Geneva.

ILO-JASPA. 1992. African Employment Report 1992. Jobs and Skills Programme for Africa, International Labour Organization, Addis Ababa.

Jourdain, R. M. 1982. Development planning and the informal sector: A case study of automobile repair shops in four cities of tropical Africa. Unpublished M.A. dissertation, University of British Columbia, Vancouver.

Kanji, N. 1995. Gender, poverty and economic adjustment in Harare, Zimbabwe. Environment and Urbanization 7: 37-55.

Kaplinsky, R. 1991. Direct foreign investment in third world manufacturing: Is the future an extension of the past? Bulletin, Institute of Development Studies 22(2): 29-35.

Karim-Sesay, P. A. N. 1995. The non-spatial and spatial character of the informal sector in Gaborone (Botswana). Unpublished B.A. (Soc. Sci.) dissertation, Department of Environmental Science, University of Botswana.

Khosa, M. M. 1993. Transport and the "taxi mafia" in South Africa. The Urban Age 2(1): 8-9.

Khouri-Dagher, N. 1986. Food and Energy in Cairo: Provisioning the Poor. Research Report No. 18, Food-Energy Nexus Programme, the United Nations University, Paris.

Lachance, A. 1993. A plot of one's own in West African cities. IDRC Reports 21(3): 8-9.

Lachaud, J. P. 1984. Les activités informelles et l'emploi à Bangui (République Centrafricaine): Analyse et stratégie de développement. Canadian Journal of African Studies 18: 291-317.

Lado, C. 1990. Informal urban agriculture in Nairobi, Kenya: Problem or resource in development and land use planning? Land Use Policy 7: 257-266.

Lee, M. 1993a. Recognizing Ethiopia's urban farmers. IDRC Reports 21(3): 12-13.

Lee, M. 1993b. Farming logic in Kampala. IDRC Reports 21(3): 10-11.

Lee, M. 1993c. Breaking new ground in Dar es Salaam. IDRC Reports 21(3): 1415.

Lee-Smith, D. and Stren, R. 1991. New perspectives on African urban management. Environment and Urbanization 3: 23-36.

Lee-Smith, D. and C. H. Trujillo. 1992. The struggle to legitimize subsistence: Women and sustainable development. Environment and Urbanization 4: 77-84.

Liedholm, C. and D. Mead. 1993. The Structure and Growth of Microenterprises in Southern and Eastern Africa: Evidence from Recent Surveys. GEMINI Working Paper No. 36, Bethesda, Md.

Liedholm, C. and M. A. McPherson. 1991. Small Scale Enterprises in Mamelodi and Kwazakhele Townships, South Africa: Survey Findings. GEMINI Technical Report No. 16, Bethesda, Md.

Macharia, K. 1992. Slum clearance and the informal economy in Nairobi. Journal of Modern African Studies 30: 221-236.

Maldonado, C. 1989. The underdogs of the urban economy join forces: Results of an ILO programme in Mali, Rwanda and Togo. international Labour Review 128: 65-84.

Maldonado, C. 1993. Building networks: An experiment in support to small urban producers in Benin. International Labour Review 132: 245-264.

Maldonado, C. and S. V. Sethuraman, eds. 1992. Technological Capability in the Informal Sector: Metal Manufacturing in Developing Countries. International Labour Office, Geneva.

Manning, C. and P. Mashigo. 1993. Manufacturing in micro-enterprises in South Africa. Unpublished report submitted to the Industrial Strategy Project, University of Cape Town.

May, J. and C. M. Rogerson. 1995. Poverty and sustainable cities in South Africa: The role of urban cultivation. Habitat International 19: 165-181.

Mazambani, D. 1982. Peri-urban cultivation within Greater Harare. Zimbabwe Science News 16: 134-138.

Mazambani, D. 1986. Aspects of pert-urban cultivation and deforestation around Harare, Zimbabwe. In: G. J. Williams and A. P. Wood, eds., Geographical Perspectives on Development in Southern Africa. Commonwealth Geographical Bureau, James Cook University of North Queensland, Townsville, pp. 189-197.

Mbiba, B. 1994. Institutional responses to uncontrolled urban cultivation in Harare: Prohibitive or accommodative? Environment and Urbanization 6: 188-202.

Mbiba, B. 1995. Urban Agriculture in Zimbabwe: implications for Urban Management and Poverty. Avebury, Aldershot.

Meagher, K. and M. B. Yunusa. 1991. Limits to Labour Absorption: Conceptual and Historical Background to Adjustment in Nigeria's Urban Informal Sector. Discussion Paper No. 28, United Nations Research Institute for Social Development, Geneva.

Mhone, G. C. Z. 1995. The Impact of Structural Adjustment on the Urban Informal Sector in Zimbabwe. Issues in Development Discussion Paper No. 2, International Labour Office, Geneva.

Mlozi, M. R. S., I. J. Lupanga, and Z. S. K. Mvena. 1992. Urban agriculture as a survival strategy in Tanzania. In: J. Baker and P. O. Pederson, eds., The Rural

Urban Interface in Africa: Expansion and Adaptation. Scandinavian Institute of African Studies, Uppsala, pp. 284-294.

Moser, C. O. N., A. J. Herbert, and R. E. Makonnen. 1993. Urban Poverty in the Context of Structural Adjustment: Recent Evidence and Policy Responses. Discussion Paper TWU DP#4, Urban Development Division, World Bank, Washington D.C.

Mosha, A. C. 1991. Urban farming practices in Tanzania. Review of Rural and Urban Planning in Southern and Eastern Africa 1: 83-92.

Mougeot, L. 1993a. Urban food self-reliance: Significance and challenges. Unpublished mimeographed report, International Development Research Centre, Ottawa.

Mougeot, L. 1993b. Urban food self-reliance: Significance and prospects. IDRC Reports 21(3): 2-5.

Mustapha, A. R. 1991. Structural Adjustment and Multiple Modes of Social Livelihood in Nigeria. Discussion Paper No. 26, United Nations Research Institute for Social Development, Geneva.

Mutizwa-Mangiza, N. D. 1993. Urban informal transport policy: The case of emergency taxis in Harare. In: L. M. Zinyama, D. S. Tevera, and S. D. Cumming, eds., Harare: The Growth and Problems of the City. University of Zimbabwe, Harare, pp. 97-108.

Nadvi, K. 1994. Industrial district experiences in developing countries. In: UNCTAD, Technological Dynamism in Industrial Districts: An Alternative Approach to Industrialization in Developing Countries. UNCTAD/ITD/TEC 11, United Nations, Geneva, pp. 191-255.

Nadvi, K. and H. Schmitz. 1994. Industrial Clusters in Less Developed Countries: Review of Experiences and Research Agendas. Discussion Paper No. 339, Institute of Development Studies, University of Sussex, Brighton.

Ngub'usim, M. N. and F. Streiffeler. 1982. Productive work for low-income families in an urban environment: An experience in Zaire. Ideas and Action 149: 3-9.

Olowolaiyemo, M. 1979. Urban Petty Producers in Nigeria and Programmes for Assisting Them. Monograph No. 3, Centre for Development Studies, University College of Swansea.

Oyeneye, O. Y. 1980. Apprentices in the informal sector of Nigeria. Labour, Capital and Society 13(2): 69-79.

Pedersen, P. O., A. Sverrisson, and M. P. van Dijk, eds. 1994. Flexible Specialization: The Dynamics of Small-Scale Industries in the South. Intermediate Technology Publications, London.

Peil, M. 1979. West African urban craftsmen. Journal of Developing Areas 14: 322.

Peters-Berries, C. 1993a. The Urban Informal Sector and Structural Adjustment in Zambia. WEP 2-19/WP.62, International Labour Office, Geneva.

Peters-Berries, C. 1993b. The Urban Informal Sector in Zimbabwe: From Insignificance to the Employer of the Last Resort. WEP 2-19/WP.61, International Labour Office, Geneva.

Peters-Berries, C. 1993c. Putting Development Policies into Practice: The Problems of Implementing Policy Reforms in Africa. WEP 2-19/WP.63, International Labour Office, Geneva.

Pyke, F. 1993. Industrial Development through Small-Firm Cooperation. International Labour Office, Geneva.

Rakodi, C. 1985. Self-reliance or survival?: Food production in African cities with particular reference to Zambia. African Urban Studies 21: 53-63.

Rakodi, C. 1988a. Urban agriculture: Research questions and Zambian evidence. Journal of Modern African Studies 26: 495-515.

Rakodi, C. 1988b. Urban agriculture in Lusaka, Zambia. In: I. Dankelman and J. Davidson, comp., Women and Environment in the Third World: Alliance for the Future. Earthscan, London, pp. 108-110.

Rasmussen, J. 1992a. The Local Entrepreneurial Milieu: Enterprise Networks in Small Zimbabwean Towns. Research Report No. 79, Department of Geography, Roskilde University, Copenhagen.

Rasmussen, J. 1992b. The small enterprise environment in Zimbabwe: Growing in the shadow of large enterprises. Bulletin, Institute of Development Studies 23(3): 2127.

Rasmussen, J. and A. Sverisson. 1994. Flexible Specialisation, Technology and Employment in Zimbabwe. WEP 2-22/WP.241, International Labour Office, Geneva.

Rasmussen, J., H. Schmitz, and M. P. van Dijk. 1992. Introduction: Exploring a new approach to small-scale industry. Bulletin, Institute of Development Studies 23(3): 2-7.

Riley, T. 1994. Characteristics of and Constraints Facing Black Businesses in South Africa: Survey Results. Informal Discussion Paper on South Africa No. 5, World Bank, Washington D.C.

Rogerson, C. M. 1991a. Home-based enterprises of the urban poor: The case of spazas. In: E. Preston-Whyte and C. Rogerson, eds., South Africa's Informal Economy. Oxford University Press, Cape Town, pp. 336-344.

Rogerson, C. M. 1991b. Deregulation, subcontracting and the "(in)formalization" of small-scale manufacturing. In: E. Preston-Whyte and C. Rogerson, eds., South Africa's Informal Economy. Oxford University Press, Cape Town, pp. 365-385.

Rogerson, C. M. 1991c. Policies for South Africa's urban informal economy: Lessons from the international experience. In: E. Preston-Whyte and C. Rogerson, eds., South Africa's Informal Economy. Oxford University Press, Cape Town, pp. 207-222.

Rogerson, C. M. 1992a. The absorptive capacity of the informal sector in the South African city. In: D. M. Smith, ed., The Apartheid City and Beyond: Urbanization and Social Change in South Africa. Routledge, London, pp. 161-171.

Rogerson, C. M. 1992b. Feeding Africa's cities: The role and potential for urban agriculture. Africa Insight 22: 229-234.

Rogerson, C. M. 1993a. Export-processing industrialization in Mauritius: The lessons of success. Development Southern Africa 10: 177-197.

Rogerson, C. M. 1993b. Urban agriculture in South Africa: Policy issues from the international experience. Development Southern Africa 10: 33-44.

Rogerson, C. M. 1993c. Urban agriculture in South Africa: Scope, issues and potential. Geo-Journal 30: 21-28.

Rogerson, C. M. 1994a. Flexible production in the developing world: The case of South Africa. Geoforum 25: 1-17.

Rogerson, C. M. 1994b. Johannesburg's initiatives for local economic development. Unpublished report for the Urban Foundation, Johannesburg.

Rogerson, C. M. 1994c. South Africa's micro-enterprise economy: A policy-focused review. In: R. Hirschowitz, M. Orkin, C. M. Rogerson, and D. Smith, eds., Micro-Enterprise Development in South Africa. European Union, Pretoria, pp. 14-37.

Rogerson, C. M. 1994d. Democracy, reconstruction and changing local and regional economic development planning in South Africa. Regional Development Dialogue 15(1): 101-118.

Rogerson, C. M. 1995a. South Africa's economic heartland: Crisis, decline or restructuring? Africa Insight 25(4): 241-247.

Rogerson, C. M. 1995b. The employment challenge in a democratic South Africa. In: A. Lemon, ed., The Geography of Change in South Africa. John Wiley, Chichester, pp. 169-194.

1995c. Looking to the Pacific Rim: Production subcontracting and small-scale industry in South Africa. International Small Business Journal 13(3): 65-79.

Rogerson, C. M. 1995d. Reconstruction and contemporary local authority initiatives for local economic development in South Africa. Paper prepared for the Conference on Reconstruction and Development in Southern Africa, 22 September, Royal Holloway, University of London, Egham.

Rogerson, C. M. 1996. Urban poverty and the informal economy in South Africa's economic heartland. Environment and Urbanization 6(1): 167-181.

Rogerson, C. M. and J. M. Rogerson. 1994. The central Witwatersrand: A metropolitan region in distress? Unpublished report for the Urban Foundation, Johannesburg.

Rondinelli, D. A. and J. D. Kasarda. 1993. Job creation needs in third world cities. In: J. D. Kasarda and A. M. Parnell, eds., Third World Cities: Problems, Policies, and Prospects. Sage, London, pp. 92-119.

Sanyal, B. 1985. Urban agriculture: Who cultivates and why? A case-study of Lusaka, Zambia. Food and Nutrition Bulletin 7(3): 15-24.

Sanyal, B. 1986. Urban Cultivation in East Africa. Research Report No. 14, Food-Energy Nexus Programme, the United Nations University, Paris.

Sanyal, B. 1987. Urban cultivation amidst modernization: How should we interpret it? Journal of Planning Education and Research 6: 197-207.

Schamp, E. 1984. The economic situation of private small garages in Bamenda. Revue de Géographie du Cameroun 4(2): 1-6.

Schmitz, H. 1984. Industrialisation strategies in less developed countries: Some lessons of historical experience. Journal of Development Studies 21: 1 -21.

Schmitz, H. 1990. Small firms and flexible specialization in developing countries. Labour and Society 15: 257-285.

Schmitz, H. 1992. On the clustering of small firms. Bulletin, Institute of Development Studies 23(3): 64-69.

Schmitz, H. and B. Musyck. 1993. Industrial Districts in Europe: Policy Lessons for Developing Countries? Discussion Paper No. 324, Institute of Development Studies, University of Sussex, Brighton.

Sheldon, K. 1991. Farming in the City: Urban Women and Agricultural Work in Mozambique. Centre for the Study of Women, University of California, Los Angeles.

Simon, D. 1992. Cities, Capital and Development: African Cities in the World Economy. Belhaven, London.

Simon, D. 1993. The World City Hypothesis: Reflections from the Periphery. Research Paper No. 7, Centre for Developing Areas Research, Department of Geography, Royal Holloway, University of London, Egham.

Smit, J. and J. Nasr. 1992. Urban agriculture for sustainable cities: Using wastes and idle land and water bodies as resources. Environment and Urbanization 4(2): 141152.

Storper, M. 1992. The limits to globalization: Technology districts and international trade. Economic Geography 68: 60-93.

Streiffeler, F. 1987. Improving urban agriculture in Africa: A social perspective. Food and Nutrition Bulletin 9(2): 8-13.

Stren, R. 1991. Helping African cities. Public Administration and Development 11: 275-279.

Stren, R. 1992a. African urban research since the late 1980s: Responses to poverty and urban growth. Urban Studies 29: 533-555.

Stren, R. 1992b. Large cities in the third world. In: UNCHS (Habitat), Metropolitan Planning and Management in the Developing World: Abidjan and Quito. United Nations Centre for Human Settlements, Nairobi, pp. 1-30.

Stren, R. 1993. "Urban management" in development assistance: An elusive concept. Cities 10: 125-138.

Tesfachew, T. 1992. Government Policies and the Urban Informal Sector in Africa. WEP 2-19/WP.59, International Labour Office, Geneva.

Tevera, D. S. 1993. Waste recycling as a livelihood in the informal sector: The case of Harare's Teviotdale dump scavengers. In: L. M. Zinyama, D. S. Tevera, and S. D. Cumming, eds., Harare: The Growth and Problems of the City. University of Zimbabwe, Harare, pp. 83-96.

Tevera, D. S. 1994. Dump scavenging in Gaborone, Botswana: Anachronism or refuge occupation of the poor? Ceografiska Annaler 76B: 21 - 32.

Therkildsen, O. 1991. Public sector driven urbanization in Tanzania. African Urban Quarterly 6: 252-256.

Thrift, N. 1994. Globalisation, regulation, urbanisation: The case of the Netherlands. Urban Studies 31: 365-380.

Tricaud, P. M. 1987. Urban Agriculture in Ibadan and Freetown. Research Report No. 23, Food-Energy Nexus Programme, United Nations University, Paris.

UNCHS. 1991. Global Strategy for Shelter to the Year 2000. United Nations Centre for Human Settlements, Nairobi.

Wekwete, K. H. 1992. Africa. In: R. Stren, R. White, and J. Whitney, eds., Sustainable Cities: Urbanization and the Environment in International Perspective. Westview, Boulder, Colo., pp. 105-140.

Yankson, P. W. K. 1995. Employment issues in the urbanization process in Ghana. Paper presented at the Conference organized by the United Nations University on Human Settlement in the Changing Global Political and Economic Processes, 25-27 August, Helsinki, Finland.


Contents - Previous - Next