19,521 to 19,530 of 19,832 Results
Adobe PDF - 12.0 MB -
SHA512: 2f4af5f0962da53e7f7316962b99e085028910c6276a12bfbe939792a57a18df67d794b8b81cfdd407cf4a823e04209a188721bb24772ee39584de9d1f6efdc2
|
Adobe PDF - 11.1 MB -
SHA512: 6daa0fb5b5cab3d79e6f8d1ad4eeb3fd5733283a8cc4eac2f876f1ef76c605b2598320f0cf3155b712bc3601cec69cc41a5dea1bc9f365c0aca28910e649f81e
|
Adobe PDF - 4.2 MB -
SHA512: 3a30301b28f0f28d4fa437165045a3ebb9ff85a361109abfbfb4820ab655fabf9318f335be34d48d18b58394d0b2015f22c36c18bce36b66be5d897e304724ef
|
Jan 27, 2018
Roever, Sally. 2015. "Negotiating formality: Informal sector, market, and state in Peru". Qualitative Data Repository. https://doi.org/10.5064/F6D798BB. QDR Main Collection. V1
Project Summary: Street vendors are commonly considered to be prototypical informal workers in Latin America, escaping compliance with the state regulation of trade. Yet vendors with fixed posts in densely concentrated commercial areas belie the conventional dichotomous concept of formality/informality, as their activities are, in fact, regulated....
|
Plain Text - 16.0 KB -
SHA512: f881dce2f4814cd333df1012be152f8be0cb3cb0334a555c4bb37bd28e84c73c5d7be51b1265352dbdf895afda03b1660e402931624c53256c2f187d5133972c
|
Adobe PDF - 354.3 KB -
SHA512: 8a98e5a4f4a34a271a755a8cadfc7af11b46d3feacb76fea1bc6e2d19f7567d398dd8a7b88f6fdbef197f76c8665b3489995b14c2d3201a90b9e917cb474af60
|
Adobe PDF - 332.3 KB -
SHA512: b28378f6cf83f7cebb7a4b9a0c0afaca43919496e5822f3c8d5f881e059e4663853d1ad45e0cf49f14ee4cb61f6ecf1f33c7eebca552a65b7638f9afa379d619
|
Adobe PDF - 141.5 KB -
SHA512: 178ac9e387e4c280cf70745475f3387982e4a2f581d6955e95342c400ecdb88b436fafafc4228d9692bd8802f852cea08ae133797d7ca764f037a9e0b9da6ec1
|
Adobe PDF - 164.6 KB -
SHA512: 60ddfae5f6b9bcfa35b3171f261c8ad4f0aaf5665de18f3a4753e1e684f4347502e2bdfef4f9f8ad9caa2e609b9be6edf15ba2851a51704adda816caa5467a01
|
Adobe PDF - 109.5 KB -
SHA512: 1ad5fbdbc14b3290b6e85d86a5241ed0606f53cc1bea3579d541119f7749716c387d70184a30e3ae8c997fcf1912d92ad38a82278693946baf943ec5b161935c
|