Title data
Neubert, Dieter:
Middle-income groups in Kenya : Conflicting realities between upward mobility and uncertainty.
In: Sozialpolitik.ch.
Vol. 1
(2019)
Issue 4
.
- No. 1.4.
DOI: https://doi.org/10.18753/2297-8224-132
Abstract in another language
For more than a decade scholars mostly from economy and development studies have described the rise of a newly emerging ‘middle class’ in the Global South in- cluding Africa. This has led to a ‘middle class narrative’ with the ‘middle class’ as the backbone of economic and democratic development. Especially with regard to the stability of the position of the people in the ‘middle’, empirical social science studies challenge the ‘middle class narrative’ and at their uncertainty and insecurity. This tension between upward mobility at the one hand uncertainty and instability at the other hand (the vulnerability-security nexus) and the options to cope with this challenge under the condition of limited provision of formal social security is the focus of this case study on Kenya. Instead of an analysis of inequality based on income, it is more helpful to start from the welfare mix and the role of social net- works as main elements of provision of social security. Against this background, we identify different strategies of coping that go together with different sets of values and lifestyles, conceptualised as milieus, that are not determined by the socio-
economic situation
Further data
Item Type: | Article in a journal |
---|---|
Refereed: | Yes |
Institutions of the University: | Faculties > Faculty of Cultural Studies > Chair Sociology of Development Faculties Faculties > Faculty of Cultural Studies |
Result of work at the UBT: | Yes |
DDC Subjects: | 300 Social sciences > 300 Social sciences, sociology and anthropology |
Date Deposited: | 09 Aug 2019 07:30 |
Last Modified: | 09 Aug 2019 07:30 |
URI: | https://eref.uni-bayreuth.de/id/eprint/51806 |