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E-formality and data justice: the individualization of street trade in Recife, Brazil

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E-formality and data justice: the individualization of street trade in Recife, Brazil. / Ramos, Rui Roberto; Hayes, Niall; Tarafdar, Monideepa.
In: Information Technology for Development, Vol. 29, No. 2-3, 31.07.2023, p. 184-204.

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Ramos RR, Hayes N, Tarafdar M. E-formality and data justice: the individualization of street trade in Recife, Brazil. Information Technology for Development. 2023 Jul 31;29(2-3):184-204. Epub 2022 Dec 7. doi: 10.1080/02681102.2022.2141673

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Bibtex

@article{56b435bf9cec47acb61759bde00f6e2d,
title = "E-formality and data justice: the individualization of street trade in Recife, Brazil",
abstract = "Informal street trade has historically been seen by local authorities as backward, inefficient, and detrimental to urban areas and thus, has been subject to formalization policies. This paper reports on an ethnographic study of a project that sought to formalize street trade in Recife (Brazil). Street trade was presented by the City Council as hindering urban mobility, unhygienic and detrimental to the development of the city. A spreadsheet was developed to record, license and enforce the formalization of street trade. The spreadsheet and its classification scheme expanded the possibilities of control over individual street vendors. We will argue that formalization requires street traders to be rendered objects and subjects of knowledge. What this does is to individualize and discipline street trade. More substantially, we argue that the regulations and classification scheme shaped understandings of street trade as becoming individualized and this led to some contradictory implications for urban street trade.",
keywords = "Classification, governmentality, formalization, e-formality, data justice",
author = "Ramos, {Rui Roberto} and Niall Hayes and Monideepa Tarafdar",
year = "2023",
month = jul,
day = "31",
doi = "10.1080/02681102.2022.2141673",
language = "English",
volume = "29",
pages = "184--204",
journal = "Information Technology for Development",
issn = "0268-1102",
publisher = "Routledge",
number = "2-3",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - E-formality and data justice

T2 - the individualization of street trade in Recife, Brazil

AU - Ramos, Rui Roberto

AU - Hayes, Niall

AU - Tarafdar, Monideepa

PY - 2023/7/31

Y1 - 2023/7/31

N2 - Informal street trade has historically been seen by local authorities as backward, inefficient, and detrimental to urban areas and thus, has been subject to formalization policies. This paper reports on an ethnographic study of a project that sought to formalize street trade in Recife (Brazil). Street trade was presented by the City Council as hindering urban mobility, unhygienic and detrimental to the development of the city. A spreadsheet was developed to record, license and enforce the formalization of street trade. The spreadsheet and its classification scheme expanded the possibilities of control over individual street vendors. We will argue that formalization requires street traders to be rendered objects and subjects of knowledge. What this does is to individualize and discipline street trade. More substantially, we argue that the regulations and classification scheme shaped understandings of street trade as becoming individualized and this led to some contradictory implications for urban street trade.

AB - Informal street trade has historically been seen by local authorities as backward, inefficient, and detrimental to urban areas and thus, has been subject to formalization policies. This paper reports on an ethnographic study of a project that sought to formalize street trade in Recife (Brazil). Street trade was presented by the City Council as hindering urban mobility, unhygienic and detrimental to the development of the city. A spreadsheet was developed to record, license and enforce the formalization of street trade. The spreadsheet and its classification scheme expanded the possibilities of control over individual street vendors. We will argue that formalization requires street traders to be rendered objects and subjects of knowledge. What this does is to individualize and discipline street trade. More substantially, we argue that the regulations and classification scheme shaped understandings of street trade as becoming individualized and this led to some contradictory implications for urban street trade.

KW - Classification

KW - governmentality

KW - formalization

KW - e-formality

KW - data justice

U2 - 10.1080/02681102.2022.2141673

DO - 10.1080/02681102.2022.2141673

M3 - Journal article

VL - 29

SP - 184

EP - 204

JO - Information Technology for Development

JF - Information Technology for Development

SN - 0268-1102

IS - 2-3

ER -