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Global Encyclopaedia of Informality, Volume 3

A Hitchhiker’s Guide to Informal Problem-Solving in human life

A journey through the informal and taken-for-granted ways of getting things done across the world.

For a post-human hitchhiker, human life–with its anxiety, aging, illness, and constant need for problem-solving–may look unviable. Yet, for humans, the life struggle is softened by human touch, human emotion, and human cooperation.

The Global Encyclopaedia of Informality, Volume 3 continues the journey of the two previous volumes into the world’s open secrets, unwritten rules, and hidden practices. It focuses on issues of emotional ambivalence and pressures of the digital age. The informal practices presented in this volume demonstrate the urgency of alleviating tensions between continuity and all-too-rapid change and the need to tackle the central problem of modern societies—uncertainty.

The volume takes the reader on a biographical journey through elusive, taken-for-granted, or banal ways of getting things done from over seventy countries and world regions. It offers an innovative understanding of the significance of fringes and challenges the assumption that informality is associated exclusively with poverty, underdevelopment, the Global South, oppressive regimes, or the former socialist countries of Eastern Europe and Central Asia. It also maps the patterns of informality around the globe, identifies specific informal practices in a context-sensitive way, and documents their ambivalent impact on people engaged in problem-solving, on societies in which these problems arise, and on humanity overall.
 

654 pages | 54 halftones, 54 line drawings | 6.14 x 9.21

FRINGE

Political Science: Political and Social Theory


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Reviews

"This book tells a story of human cooperation. It is not the narrative you’ll find in books teaching you how to solve problems. It is an assemblage of something much more endemic, fundamentally human, and much more pervasive than we tend to think of informality. It involves money and power, but also the alternative currencies of gaining advantage or gaming the system."

Bruce Schneier, author of A Hacker's Mind

Table of Contents

List of figures
List of tables
Informal shortcuts at complex crossings: A Preface
Acknowledgements

Introduction: Raison d’etre of the informality studies
1 Being born
2 Growing up
3 Adjusting to the digital age
4 Getting married
5 Belonging and social exclusion
6 Alternative currencies of support
7 Gaining an advantage
8 Informal income
9 Becoming an entrepreneur
10 Living on the edge
11 Settling in
12 Engaging politically
13 Ageing power
14 Informal care and the end
Concluding remarks: The Big Three and informality

Glossary
Index

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