In central Nairobi, crackdowns on illegal street trading by officers from the local authorities are a daily occurrence. Based on an ethnographic study of encounters between street traders and officers during crackdown operations in and around the Nairobi CBD, this article argues that crackdowns work as a platform for exchanges and thereby for the formation of social relationships. It explores how such relationships are formed and maintained during crackdowns, and how a range of urban actors has interests invested in them. The article contributes to regional literature on street trading by proposing a view of urban governance as emerging through everyday interactions and relations between urban actors. Furthermore, the article contributes to scholarship on relational urban governance by exemplifying how anthropological notions of exchange provide an analytical avenue through which such everyday interactions and relations can be explored. © 2018, Articulo - Journal of Urban Research. All rights reserved.
CITATION STYLE
Dragsted-Mutengwa, B. (2018). Street traders and “good officers”: Crackdowns as a relational form of urban governance in Nairobi. Articulo - Journal of Urban Research, 2018(17–18). Retrieved from https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85060989652&doi=10.4000%2Farticulo.3391&partnerID=40&md5=67434bd6a78b1eda1f1758847ae0649e
Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.