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@article{ Geyer2009,
 title = {Notes on spatial-structural change in urban South Africa - the 1990s},
 author = {Geyer, Hermanus S.},
 journal = {Journal of Urban and Regional Analysis},
 number = {1},
 pages = {27-39},
 volume = {1},
 year = {2009},
 issn = {2067 - 4082},
 doi = {https://doi.org/10.37043/JURA.2019.1.1.3},
 abstract = {Informal businesses used to be something that was only tolerated in the former
black townships during the years of apartheid. Since then the informal business sector has
become an integral part of the central business setup of cities in South Africa. It not only
serves to widen the security net of the urban poor in cities, it also represents the outcome
of the democratization process in the country over the past fifteen years. Yet, there has
been a tendency amongst local authorities to take steps to reduce the footprint of this
sector in the urban environment in recent years. This trend ties in with the new approach of
government to transform South African cities to become ’world class’ centres - a step that
is aimed at making the cities more visually acceptable to visitors from abroad. In this paper
an attempt is made to demonstrate the importance of the informal sector within the urban
business makeup and to show what role it played in the spatial-structural evolution of the
urban economies during the 1990s. The paper analyzes the structure of the urban
business sector as a whole and structurally links the formal and informal sectors,
demonstrating the importance of both sectors in the economic makeup of the cities. It
analyses the structure of the informal sector and shows how different layers of the sector
potentially relates to the formal urban sector.},
 keywords = {Raumplanung; spatial planning; Strukturwandel; structural change; Wirtschaftsstruktur; economic structure; tertiärer Sektor; tertiary sector; regionale Entwicklung; regional development; Stadtentwicklung; urban development; Republik Südafrika; Republic of South Africa}}