Homes at Work
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About The Book

<p>Following the outbreak of the COVID-19 pandemic working from home became a global phenomenon yet before 2020 it was a relatively understudied practice. But in informal settlements the definition of home and employment is completely intertwined which is why there is so much to learn from them. For over half a century mainstream theoretical approaches to urban informality dominated by development economics often fail to see this economic and spatial phenomenon jointly. Labor studies tend to be space-blind and spatial studies often disregard informal employment. Profoundly interdisciplinary this work connects scholarship in development public policy labor studies and feminist economics with that in urban studies planning housing architecture and visual studies.</p><p>The book walks the reader behind the closed doors of working homes that make the fabric both social and economic of most cities. It applies a visual methodology to reveal their space-use intensity and quantify the extent to which houses in informal settlements fill their inner pores with economic activity and community services. The research also revisits urban formalization policies in Latin America and Africa to uncover a fallacious politics of recognition. It ultimately argues for a recognition continuum: an approach to urban informality that is more practical and fairer.</p><p>The book is of interest to development economists urban scholars public policy specialists time-use researchers and architects working on housing employment generation urban livelihoods gender studies and related topics.</p>
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