We will keep the flame of struggle alive until the night ends : street venors, struggle to acceee right मशालें लेकरं चलना, कि जाब ताक रात बाकी है अधिकार उपलब्धीयो के लिये सडक विक्रेताओ का संघर्ष

By: Youth for Unity and Voluntary ActionMaterial type: TextTextPublication details: Navi Mumbai Youth for Unity and Voluntary Action 2020Description: 39p., col.illSubject(s): Street vendors | NHF AND YUVADDC classification: 338.09 Summary: Street vendors are broadly defined as persons working in the informal sector, offering goods and services on the street in the absence of permanent built-up structures. The term 'urban street vendor incorporates all local and regional terms used to describe them such as hawkers, feriwallas, rehri-patri wallas, footpath dukandars and sidewalk traders, among others. They are classified as (a) stationary, setting up their businesses on pavements, public/private spaces (b) mobile, wherein they move from one place to another carrying their goods on bicycles or mobile units (Bhowmik, 2005) and (c) peripatetic, who carry out vending on foot. Informal street vending not only provides gainful employment to one of the most marginalised sections of the urban poor but also contributes to the urban economy by providing cost-effective goods and services to middle-class households at affordable rates. Additionally, street vendors provide a platform for marketing goods manufactured by small-scale industries, allowing them to sell their products to the masses through minimal investment in infrastructure or advertising (Saha, 2011). Lastly, the popularity of street vendors can also be attributed to their dispersed locations across urban neighbourhoods, providing goods and services to consumers within easy reach.
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Item type Current library Call number Materials specified Status Date due Barcode
Reports Reports YUVA Library
338.09/YOU(KR) (Browse shelf (Opens below)) Not for loan RP04550
Reports Reports YUVA Library
338.09/YOU(KR) (Browse shelf (Opens below)) Not for loan RP04517

Street vendors are broadly defined as persons working in the informal sector, offering goods and services on the street in the absence of permanent built-up structures. The term 'urban street vendor incorporates all local and regional terms used to describe them such as hawkers, feriwallas, rehri-patri wallas, footpath dukandars and sidewalk traders, among others. They are classified as (a) stationary, setting up their businesses on pavements, public/private spaces (b) mobile, wherein they move from one place to another carrying their goods on bicycles or mobile units (Bhowmik, 2005) and (c) peripatetic, who carry out vending on foot. Informal street vending not only provides gainful employment to one of the most marginalised sections of the urban poor but also contributes to the urban economy by providing cost-effective goods and services to middle-class households at affordable rates. Additionally, street vendors provide a platform for marketing goods manufactured by small-scale industries, allowing them to sell their products to the masses through minimal investment in infrastructure or advertising (Saha, 2011). Lastly, the popularity of street vendors can also be attributed to their dispersed locations across urban neighbourhoods, providing goods and services to consumers within easy reach.

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