Dados Bibliográficos

AUTOR(ES) Maxim Bolt
ANO 2012
TIPO Artigo
PERIÓDICO Africa
ISSN 0100-8153
E-ISSN 2526-303X
EDITORA Cambridge University Press
DOI 10.1017/s0001972011000751
CITAÇÕES 12
ADICIONADO EM 2025-08-18
MD5 db38c287062eb4c83e36e5326538b207

Resumo

Keen to show the fluidity of border areas, and the limits of state control, much anthropological scholarship on borders highlights arrangements, activities and opportunities that pass beneath the official radar. But while such a clandestine focus casts border dwellers as preoccupied with resisting state regulation, this article shows how Zimbabwean–South African border dwellers make the most of their location by beingvisibleto state officials, as waged farm workers. They seek agricultural jobs as a foothold in building lucrative businesses. Moreover, waged farm workforces are hubs of border trade, as workers remit goods for resale as a response to the crisis at home in Zimbabwe. The article therefore questions the wider theoretical opposition between the creative entrepreneurship of the informal economy and the drudgery of formal employment. Formal and informal modes of livelihood constitute one another, intersect and are interdependent. This article unpacks the spatial and temporal articulations between waged work and other means of making ends meet. In so doing, it suggests fixating less on the border itself as a distinctive feature, replete with smugglers and murky goings-on, and appreciating the various meanings of work in borderland economies.

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