Malayishas as informal remittance couriers. A case study of Zimbabwean remittance transporters (malayishas) in Central Johannesburg

The research is a case study on a group of Zimbabwean remittance transporters who are based in the areas around central Johannesburg. These transporters are popularly known as malayishas. It must be noted that the study took place at the peak of the Zimbabwean economic crisis around the end of 2008,...

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Main Author: Nyoni, Phefumula
Format: Others
Language:en
Published: 2011
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10539/10826
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spelling ndltd-netd.ac.za-oai-union.ndltd.org-wits-oai-wiredspace.wits.ac.za-10539-108262019-05-11T03:41:08Z Malayishas as informal remittance couriers. A case study of Zimbabwean remittance transporters (malayishas) in Central Johannesburg Nyoni, Phefumula The research is a case study on a group of Zimbabwean remittance transporters who are based in the areas around central Johannesburg. These transporters are popularly known as malayishas. It must be noted that the study took place at the peak of the Zimbabwean economic crisis around the end of 2008, a period that was characterised by a boom in the remittance transportation trade. The methods of data collection used include key informant face to face interviews, focus group discussions and direct observations. The research is focused mainly on assessing the role of trust in the establishment and sustenance of relations in remittance transportation. The utility of the concept is therefore noted and explained in malayisha-client relations as well as between malayishas themselves. The study established that trust is not given but rather negotiated between different parties. The process of negotiating and building trust is not only context specific but it is also long and cannot be rationalized or generalised. The study also established that informal activities such as remittance transportation constitute an important source of livelihood for participants and must therefore not be taken as a mere survival strategy. The separation of formality from informality must not lead to marginalization or downgrading of informality but the two sectors must be viewed as complementary of each other. 2011-11-22T07:46:06Z 2011-11-22T07:46:06Z 2011-11-22 Thesis http://hdl.handle.net/10539/10826 en application/pdf application/pdf application/pdf application/pdf
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language en
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description The research is a case study on a group of Zimbabwean remittance transporters who are based in the areas around central Johannesburg. These transporters are popularly known as malayishas. It must be noted that the study took place at the peak of the Zimbabwean economic crisis around the end of 2008, a period that was characterised by a boom in the remittance transportation trade. The methods of data collection used include key informant face to face interviews, focus group discussions and direct observations. The research is focused mainly on assessing the role of trust in the establishment and sustenance of relations in remittance transportation. The utility of the concept is therefore noted and explained in malayisha-client relations as well as between malayishas themselves. The study established that trust is not given but rather negotiated between different parties. The process of negotiating and building trust is not only context specific but it is also long and cannot be rationalized or generalised. The study also established that informal activities such as remittance transportation constitute an important source of livelihood for participants and must therefore not be taken as a mere survival strategy. The separation of formality from informality must not lead to marginalization or downgrading of informality but the two sectors must be viewed as complementary of each other.
author Nyoni, Phefumula
spellingShingle Nyoni, Phefumula
Malayishas as informal remittance couriers. A case study of Zimbabwean remittance transporters (malayishas) in Central Johannesburg
author_facet Nyoni, Phefumula
author_sort Nyoni, Phefumula
title Malayishas as informal remittance couriers. A case study of Zimbabwean remittance transporters (malayishas) in Central Johannesburg
title_short Malayishas as informal remittance couriers. A case study of Zimbabwean remittance transporters (malayishas) in Central Johannesburg
title_full Malayishas as informal remittance couriers. A case study of Zimbabwean remittance transporters (malayishas) in Central Johannesburg
title_fullStr Malayishas as informal remittance couriers. A case study of Zimbabwean remittance transporters (malayishas) in Central Johannesburg
title_full_unstemmed Malayishas as informal remittance couriers. A case study of Zimbabwean remittance transporters (malayishas) in Central Johannesburg
title_sort malayishas as informal remittance couriers. a case study of zimbabwean remittance transporters (malayishas) in central johannesburg
publishDate 2011
url http://hdl.handle.net/10539/10826
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