Resource Library

Discrimination And Development

Migration, Urbanisation, And Sustainable Livelihoods

Author : Landau, L.B.

Publisher: University of the Witwatersrand

Place of Publish: Southern Africa

Year: 2006

Acc. No: 286-S

Category: Soft Documents

Type of Resource: Migration, Urbanisation, Sustainable livelihood study, Discrimination, Urban poor, Financial services, Social services

ISBN: English

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Through its analysis of new survey data and interviews coupled with participant observation, this article examines how official and popular responses to international migration and urbanization may undermine Johannesburg's efforts to build a prosperous, safe, and inclusive city. Working from the position that international migration is an inexorable response regional economic inequality, it illustrates how ignorance, xenophobia, and legal discrimination are preventing significant numbers of foreign migrants from productively integrating into Johannesburg's politics, economy, and communities. In concludes that in an era of migration, building inclusive and sustainable cities means finding creative ways to combat discrimination based on nationality, even when such exclusion is legally, politically, and socially mandated. Doing otherwise tacitly endorses human rights abuses, social fragmentation, inequitable growth, and insecurity.
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