The informal sector in urban Nigeria: Reflections from almost four decades of research

Type Journal Article - Town and Regional Planning
Title The informal sector in urban Nigeria: Reflections from almost four decades of research
Author(s)
Volume 59
Publication (Day/Month/Year) 2011
Page numbers 65-76
URL http://www.ajol.info/index.php/trp/article/download/77222/67671
Abstract
The rapid expansion of the informal sector or economy in both developed and
developing countries has not only captured the attention of researchers, development
analysts, government officials and international agencies but is also prompting a
massive profusion of literature on the topic. In the face of the huge plethora of informal
sector literature, some scholars advocate ‘country distinction’ as a scale-bound and
context-specific template for gauging both the ‘national’ and ‘global’ accounts of the
informality story. The Nigerian informal sector is metaphoric of old wine in a new wineskin
since ‘informality’ research in the country predates the introduction of the concept
there. It was the ILO city-study mission to Lagos in 1975 that pioneered the concept
but the terminology tottered until the mid-1980s before it diffused the mainstream of
academic and policy circles. Ever since the structural adjustment programme (SAP)
of 1986, the ascribed informal workforce has grown in leaps and bounds both in real
numbers and in activity diversification. The article explores the nearly two decades’
trajectory and substance of informal sector research in Nigeria. It is significant for two
reasons: no previous elaborate attempt has been made to systematically document or
review the motleys of informal sector literature in Nigeria, and this evaluation promises,
among other things, to provide the feedbacks necessary to avert a slide of informality
research into “ritual academic blind alleys” (Flyvbjerg, 2004a: 422). Based on the
foregoing, the article synthesises the knowledge gains (as well as gaps) and concludes
with recommendations for future research.

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