Formalities of Poverty: Thinking about Social Assistance in Neoliberal South Africa
- 1 September 2007
- journal article
- Published by Cambridge University Press (CUP) in African Studies Review
- Vol. 50 (2) , 71-86
- https://doi.org/10.1353/arw.2007.0092
Abstract
In Marginal Gains (2004), Jane Guyer traces the logic of African socioeconomic practices that have long confounded attempts by modern states to impose what she terms “formalization.” Nowhere is the tension between pragmatically “informal” economic life and putatively “formal” state structures more evident than in the domain of poverty interventions, which typically aim to bring state institutional power to bear precisely on those who are most excluded from the “formal sector.” This article offers a preliminary analysis of some new rationalities of poverty alleviation observable in recent South African political and policy discourse. I will argue that new sorts of programmatic thinking about poverty represent a new development within (and not simply against) neoliberalism, and that they seek, by abandoning the regulatory and normalizing functions usually associated with social assistance, to bring the formal and the informal into a new sort of relation.Keywords
This publication has 12 references indexed in Scilit:
- Class, Race, and Inequality in South AfricaForeign Affairs, 2006
- Class, Race, and Inequality in South AfricaPublished by Yale University Press ,2005
- The Biometric State: The Promise and Peril of Digital Government in the New South AfricaJournal of Southern African Studies, 2005
- Markets of DispossessionPublished by Duke University Press ,2005
- Purity and DangerPublished by Taylor & Francis ,2003
- Social Capital Versus Social TheoryPublished by Taylor & Francis ,2002
- Ageing and Social Policy in South Africa: Historical Perspectives with Particular Reference to the Eastern CapeJournal of Southern African Studies, 2000
- Powers of FreedomPublished by Cambridge University Press (CUP) ,1999
- Foucault and Political Reason: Liberalism, Neo-Liberalism, and Rationalities of GovernmentContemporary Sociology: A Journal of Reviews, 1997
- The Dynamics of Culture Change: An Inquiry into Race Relations in AfricaThe American Catholic Sociological Review, 1945