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Understanding West Africa’s informal workers as working class

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  • Joshua Lew McDermott

Abstract

Informal workers in Africa are very often portrayed as primarily self-employed entrepreneurs and unemployed individuals largely excluded from capitalism, and thus insulated from class analysis and class dynamics. Drawing on a case study of informal workers in Sierra Leone, the article challenges this dominant understanding, arguing that informal workers experience the reality of class relations and that their material lives are shaped by, and help to shape, broader dynamics of capital accumulation. The research applies a holistic class analysis rooted in Marxist and feminist thought, arguing for an understanding of informal workers, including even small-scale ‘self-employed’ individuals, as workers exploited by, and opposed to the interests of, capital. In so doing, it challenges the simple understandings of working class as existing only and exclusively through formalised wage work, in favour of a more complex and inductive understanding of the reality of global capitalism, highlighting the relevance of class, value and exploitation to the lived reality of informal workers in Africa.

Suggested Citation

  • Joshua Lew McDermott, 2021. "Understanding West Africa’s informal workers as working class," Review of African Political Economy, Taylor & Francis Journals, vol. 48(170), pages 609-629, October.
  • Handle: RePEc:taf:revape:v:48:y:2021:i:170:p:609-629
    DOI: 10.1080/03056244.2021.1967734
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    Cited by:

    1. Héritier Mesa, 2022. "Wage labor and social inequality in Kinshasa's informal economy: A class analysis," ULB Institutional Repository 2013/362624, ULB -- Universite Libre de Bruxelles.
    2. Joshua Lew McDermott, 2023. "Searching for the Informal Labor Movement: Theorizing Class and Collective Action among Informal Workers in West Africa," Review of Radical Political Economics, Union for Radical Political Economics, vol. 55(2), pages 333-352, June.

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