5 research outputs found

    Remittance micro-worlds and migrant infrastructure: circulations, disruptions, and the movement of money

    Get PDF
    Remittances are increasingly central to development discourses in Africa. The development sector seeks to leverage transnational migration and rapid innovations in financial technologies (fintech), to make remittance systems cheaper for end-users and less risky for states and companies. Critical scholarship, however, questions the techno-fix tendency, calling for grounded research on the intersections between remittances, technologies, and everyday life in African cities and beyond. Building on this work, we deploy the concepts of “micro-worlds” and “migrant infrastructure” to make sense of the complex networks of actors, practices, regulations, and materialities that shape remittance worlds. To ground the work, we narrate two vignettes of remittance service providers who operate in Cape Town, South Africa, serving the Congolese diaspora community. We showcase the important role of logistics companies in the “informal” provision of remittance services and the rise of fintech companies operating in the remittance space. These vignettes give substance to the messy and relational dynamics of remittance micro-worlds. This relationality allows us to see how remittances are circulations, not unidirectional flows; how they are not split between formal and informal, but in fact intersect in blurry ways; how digital technologies are central to the story of migrant infrastructures; and how migrants themselves are compositional of these networks. In doing so, we tell a more relational story about how remittance systems are constituted and configured

    “Family Planning Is Not a Bad Thing”:A Qualitative Study of Individual Level Factors Explaining Hormonal Contraceptive Uptake and Consistent Use Among Adolescent Girls in the Kintampo Area of Ghana

    Get PDF
    Pregnancy among adolescent girls is a public health problem globally and especially in developing countries. Its occurrence can be prevented with the correct and consistent use of effective contraceptive methods. This study explored the personal determinants of hormonal contraceptive uptake and consistent use among adolescent girls as evidence for informing effective hormonal contraceptive use interventions among them. In-depth interviews were carried out among 16 girls aged 15 to 19 years with hormonal contraceptive experience between April and June 2022 in Kintampo, Ghana. Results showed that knowledge on hormonal contraceptive types and sources of obtaining them, organizing hormonal contraceptive uptake and self-efficacy in getting access, hormonal contraceptive use decision-making, and disclosure of hormonal contraceptive use were important factors explaining uptake and consistent hormonal contraceptive use among adolescent girls in this study. Also, coping mechanisms and skills for accessing and using hormonal contraceptives, attitude toward hormonal contraceptives, and risk perception toward pregnancy influence the uptake and consistent use of hormonal contraceptives. Participants in this study were resilient and highly in favor of hormonal contraceptive use. They have demonstrated that it is possible for adolescent girls to use hormonal contraceptives and use them consistently if interventions are targeted at their attitude to hormonal contraceptives, their self-efficacy, decision-making skills, coping skills, and pregnancy risk perception, among others

    Displacing Informality: Rights and Legitimacy in Belo Horizonte, Brazil

    Get PDF
    This article compares two cases of displacement suffered by informal workers and informal residents in the Brazilian city of Belo Horizonte, both connected to the hosting of the 2014 FIFA World Cup. It asks the following question: considering that the right to work and the right to housing are both enshrined in the Brazilian Constitution, why do claims upon space based on those constitutional rights have different degrees of legitimacy? Two cases are analysed in detail. The first one concerns a group of informal workers displaced from their workspace for the modernization of the local stadium. The second one tells the story of an informal settlement where 90 families were displaced due to the construction of a flyover designed to improve access to the football stadium. This article engages with current postcolonial debates around urban informality, tackling two points that have been absent from these discussions. First, it compares two ways of informally occupying urban space—for work and for housing—revealing the distinct degrees of legitimacy embedded in such practices due to pre‐existing institutional arrangements. Second, it emphasizes the connection between work and home through the life strategies and place‐making practices of the urban poor
    corecore