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Women's experiences of street trading in Cape Town and its impact on their well-being

Street trading forms a large subsection of South Africa's informal economic activity, creating opportunity for self-employment and sustaining livelihoods (Mitullah, 2003; Skinner, 2008). Yet, street traders face various barriers including societal marginalization and pervasive poverty, threatening t...

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Main Author: Sassen, Sharyn Ruth
Other Authors: Galvaan, Roshan
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Department of Health and Rehabilitation Sciences 2015
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access_status_str Open Access
author Sassen, Sharyn Ruth
author2 Galvaan, Roshan
author_browse Galvaan, Roshan
Sassen, Sharyn Ruth
author_facet Galvaan, Roshan
Sassen, Sharyn Ruth
author_sort Sassen, Sharyn Ruth
collection Thesis
description Street trading forms a large subsection of South Africa's informal economic activity, creating opportunity for self-employment and sustaining livelihoods (Mitullah, 2003; Skinner, 2008). Yet, street traders face various barriers including societal marginalization and pervasive poverty, threatening their well-being. The scarcity of occupational therapy literature around informal economy occupations limits the profession's understanding about what engagement in such occupations entails. While available literature around work in the informal economy emphasises economic contributions to development, there is limited evidence that informal business owners effectively escape vulnerability. From an occupational perspective, little is known about how these occupations are experienced and their implications for well-being. This study will inform contextually relevant conceptions of participation in the informal economy occupation of street trade, providing necessary knowledge for social and political practices of occupational therapy. The study aimed to describe women street traders' experiences of street trading and, how they perceived these related to their well-being. The objectives were to identify personal and external factors that promoted or hindered their well-being whilst engaged in street trading. An ethnographic inquiry was carried out with four women street traders identified through purposive recruitment. It involved semi-structured and photo elicitation interviews, and participant observation. Interviews were audio recorded and transcribed for inductive and thematic cross case analysis and field notes were made following interviews and participant observation. One theme and three categories emerged in the findings. The theme, 'Togetherness: steering against the current towards a better life", revealed the impact of interpersonal connectedness as participants attempted to steer towards valued lives against various barriers. The first category, 'Taking the helm', described the women's actions to determine valued livelihoods. 'Facing tough conditions' detailed the personal and external barriers they encountered while attempting to direct their lives towards positive outcomes through street trading. The third category, 'We're in the same boat' demonstrated the significance and the positive and negative impact of interpersonal connectedness for street traders. Conclusively, the study revealed how the contextually situated nature of this occupation translated to nuanced and fluid experiences of wellbeing in street trading, where well-being was deeply tied to valued social connectedness and significance of collective well-being.
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institution University of Cape Town (South Africa)
language eng
last_indexed 2026-06-10T12:33:17.409Z
license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2015
publishDateRange 2015
publishDateSort 2015
publisher Department of Health and Rehabilitation Sciences
publisherStr Department of Health and Rehabilitation Sciences
record_format dspace
source_str UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/14086 Women's experiences of street trading in Cape Town and its impact on their well-being Sassen, Sharyn Ruth Galvaan, Roshan Duncan, Madeleine Occupational Therapy Street trading forms a large subsection of South Africa's informal economic activity, creating opportunity for self-employment and sustaining livelihoods (Mitullah, 2003; Skinner, 2008). Yet, street traders face various barriers including societal marginalization and pervasive poverty, threatening their well-being. The scarcity of occupational therapy literature around informal economy occupations limits the profession's understanding about what engagement in such occupations entails. While available literature around work in the informal economy emphasises economic contributions to development, there is limited evidence that informal business owners effectively escape vulnerability. From an occupational perspective, little is known about how these occupations are experienced and their implications for well-being. This study will inform contextually relevant conceptions of participation in the informal economy occupation of street trade, providing necessary knowledge for social and political practices of occupational therapy. The study aimed to describe women street traders' experiences of street trading and, how they perceived these related to their well-being. The objectives were to identify personal and external factors that promoted or hindered their well-being whilst engaged in street trading. An ethnographic inquiry was carried out with four women street traders identified through purposive recruitment. It involved semi-structured and photo elicitation interviews, and participant observation. Interviews were audio recorded and transcribed for inductive and thematic cross case analysis and field notes were made following interviews and participant observation. One theme and three categories emerged in the findings. The theme, 'Togetherness: steering against the current towards a better life", revealed the impact of interpersonal connectedness as participants attempted to steer towards valued lives against various barriers. The first category, 'Taking the helm', described the women's actions to determine valued livelihoods. 'Facing tough conditions' detailed the personal and external barriers they encountered while attempting to direct their lives towards positive outcomes through street trading. The third category, 'We're in the same boat' demonstrated the significance and the positive and negative impact of interpersonal connectedness for street traders. Conclusively, the study revealed how the contextually situated nature of this occupation translated to nuanced and fluid experiences of wellbeing in street trading, where well-being was deeply tied to valued social connectedness and significance of collective well-being. 2015-09-25T07:34:52Z 2015-09-25T07:34:52Z 2013 Master Thesis Masters MSc (Occupational Therapy) http://hdl.handle.net/11427/14086 eng application/pdf Department of Health and Rehabilitation Sciences Faculty of Health Sciences University of Cape Town
spellingShingle Occupational Therapy
Sassen, Sharyn Ruth
Women's experiences of street trading in Cape Town and its impact on their well-being
thesis_degree_str Master's
title Women's experiences of street trading in Cape Town and its impact on their well-being
title_full Women's experiences of street trading in Cape Town and its impact on their well-being
title_fullStr Women's experiences of street trading in Cape Town and its impact on their well-being
title_full_unstemmed Women's experiences of street trading in Cape Town and its impact on their well-being
title_short Women's experiences of street trading in Cape Town and its impact on their well-being
title_sort women s experiences of street trading in cape town and its impact on their well being
topic Occupational Therapy
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/14086
work_keys_str_mv AT sassensharynruth womensexperiencesofstreettradingincapetownanditsimpactontheirwellbeing