Orders of trade: regulating Accra's Makola market
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Orders of trade : regulating Accra's Makola market. / Beek, Jan; Thiel, Alena.
I: Journal of Legal Pluralism and Unofficial Law, Bind 49, Nr. 1, 02.01.2017, s. 34-53.Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskrift › Tidsskriftartikel › Forskning › fagfællebedømt
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TY - JOUR
T1 - Orders of trade
T2 - regulating Accra's Makola market
AU - Beek, Jan
AU - Thiel, Alena
N1 - Funding Information: This study was supported by the Africa's Asian Options (AFRASO) project sponsored by the Federal Ministry of Education and Research, the project “Boundary Work: Police in West Africa” of the DFG, the project “Translating Urban Modernities” in the framework of the DFG Priority Programme 1448, and the Centre for Citizenship, Civil Society and Rule of Law (CISRUL). Publisher Copyright: © 2017 The Journal of Legal Pluralism and Unofficial Law.
PY - 2017/1/2
Y1 - 2017/1/2
N2 - Looking closely at everyday practices within marketplaces such as the Makola market in Ghana's capital Accra brings to the fore the very diversity of actors and institutions involved in order-implementation in this particular social space. All of these actors draw on multiple conceptions of order and creatively recombine its various elements and significations into ever-new contexts. Our joint article on the maintenance of order in Makola takes the perspective of two key, ordering actors and institutions in this market–traders associations and police forces–and analyses the manifold and mutually entangled conceptions of order on which these actors draw in their pursuit to legitimise their own and others’ actions. Police officers may not represent the state but act in the light of business interests, whereas market associations follow many more rationalities apart from their members’ economic gains. They perceive themselves as a market family, and enact particular realms of stateness; for example, when assisting with tax collection. Based on our ethnographic fieldwork, in which each researcher independently focused on particular actor groups in the market, we analyse how these constellations of actors and their particular conceptions of order play out in everyday practices and interactions.
AB - Looking closely at everyday practices within marketplaces such as the Makola market in Ghana's capital Accra brings to the fore the very diversity of actors and institutions involved in order-implementation in this particular social space. All of these actors draw on multiple conceptions of order and creatively recombine its various elements and significations into ever-new contexts. Our joint article on the maintenance of order in Makola takes the perspective of two key, ordering actors and institutions in this market–traders associations and police forces–and analyses the manifold and mutually entangled conceptions of order on which these actors draw in their pursuit to legitimise their own and others’ actions. Police officers may not represent the state but act in the light of business interests, whereas market associations follow many more rationalities apart from their members’ economic gains. They perceive themselves as a market family, and enact particular realms of stateness; for example, when assisting with tax collection. Based on our ethnographic fieldwork, in which each researcher independently focused on particular actor groups in the market, we analyse how these constellations of actors and their particular conceptions of order play out in everyday practices and interactions.
KW - Ghana
KW - Makola
KW - market
KW - order
KW - police
KW - state
KW - traders
U2 - 10.1080/07329113.2017.1289358
DO - 10.1080/07329113.2017.1289358
M3 - Journal article
AN - SCOPUS:85013036598
VL - 49
SP - 34
EP - 53
JO - Journal of Legal Pluralism and Unofficial Law
JF - Journal of Legal Pluralism and Unofficial Law
SN - 0732-9113
IS - 1
ER -
ID: 324834554