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Living side-by-side? An analysis of the changing relationship between race, space and class in Cape Town, 1980-2011

The aim of this project was to explore the changing relationship between race, space and class in Cape Town during the 1980-2011 period by using the social polarisation vs professionalisation debate as the starting point. The previous working on this debate, as it pertains to Cape Town, took place p...

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Main Author: Solomon, Jean-Paul
Other Authors: Crankshaw, Owen
Format: Thesis
Language:Eng
Published: Department of Sociology 2019
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access_status_str Open Access
author Solomon, Jean-Paul
author2 Crankshaw, Owen
author_browse Crankshaw, Owen
Solomon, Jean-Paul
author_facet Crankshaw, Owen
Solomon, Jean-Paul
author_sort Solomon, Jean-Paul
collection Thesis
description The aim of this project was to explore the changing relationship between race, space and class in Cape Town during the 1980-2011 period by using the social polarisation vs professionalisation debate as the starting point. The previous working on this debate, as it pertains to Cape Town, took place prior to the availability of the 2011 census data and this project continued that work. Based on the data, the growth of high-income occupations continued, in the preceding decade, combined with considerable growth in middle-income non-manual occupations and an improved educational profile of the employed population. However, this project goes beyond that earlier work, by examining the changing racial composition of the relevant occupational groups in relation to the composition of the working age population at each data point. The spatial or geographical analyses uses both a GIS platform to map the changing distribution of the races, occupational classes and the unemployed, as well as two segregation indices aimed at better understanding the city-wide impacts of those geographical changes. The GIS work uses concepts like suburb and ghetto, both of which are ubiquitous in urban studies literature, as a backdrop, but ultimately asks the following question regarding the spatial changes: What are the spatial implications of a deracialising and professionalising labour market? Ultimately, the findings show that despite the aforementioned deracialisation of high-income and middle-income occupations, Black Africans and Coloured remained most affected by unemployment. Furthermore, in spite of all these changes, Cape Town was still profoundly racially segregated in 2011.
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institution University of Cape Town (South Africa)
language Eng
last_indexed 2026-06-10T12:32:27.580Z
license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2019
publishDateRange 2019
publishDateSort 2019
publisher Department of Sociology
publisherStr Department of Sociology
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source_str UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/30423 Living side-by-side? An analysis of the changing relationship between race, space and class in Cape Town, 1980-2011 Solomon, Jean-Paul Crankshaw, Owen The aim of this project was to explore the changing relationship between race, space and class in Cape Town during the 1980-2011 period by using the social polarisation vs professionalisation debate as the starting point. The previous working on this debate, as it pertains to Cape Town, took place prior to the availability of the 2011 census data and this project continued that work. Based on the data, the growth of high-income occupations continued, in the preceding decade, combined with considerable growth in middle-income non-manual occupations and an improved educational profile of the employed population. However, this project goes beyond that earlier work, by examining the changing racial composition of the relevant occupational groups in relation to the composition of the working age population at each data point. The spatial or geographical analyses uses both a GIS platform to map the changing distribution of the races, occupational classes and the unemployed, as well as two segregation indices aimed at better understanding the city-wide impacts of those geographical changes. The GIS work uses concepts like suburb and ghetto, both of which are ubiquitous in urban studies literature, as a backdrop, but ultimately asks the following question regarding the spatial changes: What are the spatial implications of a deracialising and professionalising labour market? Ultimately, the findings show that despite the aforementioned deracialisation of high-income and middle-income occupations, Black Africans and Coloured remained most affected by unemployment. Furthermore, in spite of all these changes, Cape Town was still profoundly racially segregated in 2011. 2019-08-01T14:14:00Z 2019-08-01T14:14:00Z 2019 2019-07-29T12:25:18Z Doctoral Thesis Doctoral PhD http://hdl.handle.net/11427/30423 Eng application/pdf Department of Sociology Faculty of Humanities
spellingShingle Solomon, Jean-Paul
Living side-by-side? An analysis of the changing relationship between race, space and class in Cape Town, 1980-2011
thesis_degree_str Doctoral
title Living side-by-side? An analysis of the changing relationship between race, space and class in Cape Town, 1980-2011
title_full Living side-by-side? An analysis of the changing relationship between race, space and class in Cape Town, 1980-2011
title_fullStr Living side-by-side? An analysis of the changing relationship between race, space and class in Cape Town, 1980-2011
title_full_unstemmed Living side-by-side? An analysis of the changing relationship between race, space and class in Cape Town, 1980-2011
title_short Living side-by-side? An analysis of the changing relationship between race, space and class in Cape Town, 1980-2011
title_sort living side by side an analysis of the changing relationship between race space and class in cape town 1980 2011
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/30423
work_keys_str_mv AT solomonjeanpaul livingsidebysideananalysisofthechangingrelationshipbetweenracespaceandclassincapetown19802011