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"Street foods," the term coined by Irene Tinker for the Equity
Policy Center's action-research project, defines the study of all
meals, snacks, and sweets currently sold on the streets of the
world for immediate consumption.
The culmination of fifteen years of research in provincial cities
in the Philippines, Thailand, Indonesia, Bangladesh, Egypt,
Nigeria, and Senegal, Street Foods is the first empirical study of
those who make, sell, and eat these foods. The project detailed in
this book was and will be a means to affect change on both micro
and macro levels: the findings were utilized to improve the income
of the vendors themselves and the safety of the food they sold, and
to cause makers of public policy to recognize the value of this
informal sector--instead of trying to restrict its trade. The
accumulated power of the Street Food Project's data brings new
insights to the nature of microenterprises, the interventions that
truly help improve income and food safety, and the gender aspects
of the street food trade. Challenging conventional wisdom about the
informal sector and assumptions in development theory about women,
Street Foods will reframe the major debates shaping research and
aid policies for poor, small-scale entrepreneurs in developing
countries.
Street foods are sold in almost every country in the world. Many
urban and rural people depend on them for one or more meals each
day. This book explores this world of entrepreneurs in developing
countries. When all of the participants in the delivery are
counted, including local farmers, food processors, and street
vendors, one realizes the enormous size of this "industry."
Research conducted by the authors with vendors, local community
leaders, and public health officials, worked not only to collect
data, but to raise the hygiene of the food that is sold.
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