An Everyday Geography of the Global South

Front Cover
Routledge, Jun 14, 2007 - Political Science - 264 pages

Taking a broad perspective of livelihoods, this book draws on more than ninety case studies from thirty-six countries across Asia, Africa and Latin America to examine how people are engaging and living with modernity. This extends from changes in the ways that households operate, to how and why people take on new work and acquire new skills, how migration and mobility have become increasingly common features of existence, and how aspirations and expectations are being reworked under the influence of modernization.

To date, this is the only book which takes such an approach to building an understanding of the global South. By using the experience of the non-Western world to illuminate and inform mainstream debates in geography, and in beginning from the lived experiences of ‘ordinary’ people, this book provides an alternative insight into a range of geographical debates. The clarity of argument and its use of detailed case studies makes this book an invaluable resource for students.

 

Contents

The everyday globalisation and the Global South
1
Lives living and livelihoods
24
The structures and rhythms of everyday life
44
Livelihood transitions
70
5 Living with modernity
95
6 Living on the move
118
7 Governing the everyday
144
The everyday and resistance
167
9 The structures of the everyday
185
Notes
198
References
204
Index
222
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About the author (2007)

Jonathan Rigg is Professor of Geography at Durham University. His research interests include development in the South-East Asian region, rural and agrarian change, and political ecology.

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