Towards an Integration of the Streets and Their Inhabitants
Kamuran Elbeyoğlu
A chapter in Global Street Economy and Micro Entrepreneurship, 2020, vol. 103, pp 45-52 from Emerald Group Publishing Limited
Abstract:
The integration of the urban people to the city is on the one hand the integration of the physical and natural structure of the city with human element, and on the other hand, integration of urban people with each other by acquiring urban culture. City streets are mostly inhabited by street residents, which include street vendors, who sell products changing from food to textile, arts and crafts or music in an affordable price to city dwellers, and also people who, for economical, psychological or sociological reasons, live in the streets such as beggars and homeless people. If the spirit of a city can exist within the common production and living space of the people who make that city, then it means that the cities lose their souls to exclude those who choose to live on the streets or those who earns their living on the street. If no one can exist without the other, then the existence of the mainstream labour market of the city would only be possible by accepting street residents, whether the ones who choose to live in the streets or earns a living in the streets, who it has marginalised by ignoring and pushing outside the orthodox norms of the city life.
Keywords: Street residents; city dwellers; modernism; urbanisation; otherness; prejudices (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2020
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Persistent link: https://EconPapers.repec.org/RePEc:eme:csefzz:s1569-375920200000103005
DOI: 10.1108/S1569-375920200000103005
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