Surviving social exclusion: Zimababwean migrants in Johannesburg, South Africa
The thesis analyses forms and levels of social exclusion of Zimbabwean migrants in the South African labour market and society. The research reveals that migrants face social exclusion through unruly practices of public officials and institutional bias. At com...
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| Format: | Thesis | 
| Language: | English | 
| Published: | 
        
      University of South Africa (Unisa)    
    
      2016
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| Subjects: | |
| Online Access: | http://hdl.handle.net/11408/1857 | 
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| Summary: | The  thesis  analyses  forms  and  levels  of  social  exclusion  of  Zimbabwean  migrants  in  the  South  African  labour  market  and  society.  The  research  reveals
  that  migrants  face  social  exclusion  through  unruly  practices  of  public  officials  and  institutional  bias.  At  community  and  individual  level  migrants  are  devalued  and  stigmatised  by  the  local  South  Africans  and  other  Zimbabwean  migrants.  To  some  extent  Zimbabwean  migrants  participate  in  their  own  exclusion as they are divided along regional and ethnic lines. The  thesis  proposes  an  analytical  framework  for  understanding  the  social  exclusion  of  Zimbabwean  migrants  emphasising  on  how  devaluation  of  migrant  identity  narrows  the  existing  structure  of  opportunity,  leading  to  various  coping  mechanisms  some  of  which  are 
deviant.  The  thesis  proposes  a  moral  and  pragmatic  view  in  understanding  the  social  exclusion  of  migrants  from  a  cosmopolitan  perspective  where  migrants  are  citizens  of  a  global world.  Using  a  qualitative  methodology  the  research  provides  an  in-depth  analysis  of  the  life  histories of fifty eight (58) ‘documented’ and undocumented’ Zimbabwean men and women in Kempton Park and Tembisa. The research was carried out in 2012. Migrants  respond  to  social  exclusion  by  using  social  capital  in  the  form  of  family/kinship,  ethnic and church networks. Zimbabweans mainly rely on bonding rather than bridging social capital. To a greater extent, migrant networks help  them to ‘get by’ and simply survive. The few  that  have  managed  to  ‘get  ahead’,  have  made  use  of  networks  with  South  African  
residents and other individuals outside their migrant network systems. These have facilitated acquisition  of  fake  identity  documents,  jobs  and  other  necessities.  Family  networks  are  beginning  to  repel  migrants  because  of  the  economic  pressures  they  face leading  to  the  weakening of ties among Zimbabwean migrant family members. | 
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