“Leave us alone”: ‘right to the city’ of street vendors along Main North 1 Road, Maseru, Lesotho

Author:

Matamanda Abraham R.ORCID,Kalaoane Rets’epile C.ORCID,Chakwizira JamesORCID

Abstract

AbstractThis article explores the lived daily experiences of street vendors operating along the Main North 1 Road in the CBD of Maseru, Lesotho. This exploration considers how street vendors access and negotiate a claim for the right to the street. The challenges confronting these vendors in their daily hustling, including COVID-19 restrictions, are also examined. A narrative inquiry research design informs this article with data collected from interviews with purposively selected street vendors from Maseru. This primary data was triangulated with document analysis to increase the validity of the findings. The findings highlight strategies employed by vendors in Maseru that include integrating with the formal enterprises, diversifying their trades, resisting and frustrating certain decisions by the local authorities, and contributing to urban blight. A framework for interrogating and understanding street vending and its nuances is postulated based on the findings from Maseru. The article strongly appeals to the authorities to find more benign ways of integrating street vending into the production of cities.

Funder

University of the Free State

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

Geography, Planning and Development

Reference45 articles.

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5. Bandauko, E., & Mandisvika, G. (2015). Right to the city? An analysis of the criminalisation of the informal sector in Harare, Zimbabwe. Journal of Advocacy, Research and Education, 4(3), 184–191.

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