Globalized Urban Precarity in Berlin and Abidjan: Young Men and the Digital Economy
By (Author) Hannah Schilling
Manchester University Press
Manchester University Press
1st March 2023
United Kingdom
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Urban communities
Social and cultural anthropology
Labour / income economics
Gender studies: men and boys
331.257290943155
Hardback
232
Width 138mm, Height 216mm, Spine 14mm
417g
Globalised urban precarity in Berlin and Abidjan examines urban youths practices of making do in digital economies, to understand how precarious working conditions reverberate in the coming of age in contemporary cities. Through a comparative analysis of the perspectives of young men working as air time sellers in Abidjan and food delivery riders and Berlin, the book provides innovative analytical lenses to understand urban inequalities against the backdrop of current digital urban developments. Essentially, this ethnography challenges the easy conflation of instability with insecurity, and overcomes the centrality of wage labour in research on urban livelihood, by looking at a broader set of economic practices and relational mechanisms. The analysis shows how accruing symbolic capital, a feel for the game in contexts of ambiguity and access to care are fundamental for explaining the unequal distribution of risks for socio-material insecurities in unstable work settings.
Hannah Schilling is an urban sociologist and associated member of the Georg-Simmel Center for Metropolitan Studies, Humboldt-Universitt zu Berlin.