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Mappings of Power: The State, NGOs, and International Organizations in the Informal Economy of Cairo

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  08 August 2003

Julia Elyachar
Affiliation:
Near Eastern Studies, New York University

Extract

Ahmed Sa'id was Secretary of his neighborhood NGO and a member of a joint government-NGO committee. He was also a successful owner/operator, or master (‘usta), of a workshop (warsha). He owned a body shop that checked the balance of cars with computerized equipment. He had paid 120,000 LE (about US$ 35,000) for that equipment—produced in Italy to his specifications—with money he had saved as a migrant worker in Germany, Turkey, and Italy. Sa'id's equipment gleamed in the center of his workshop. To the left stood his desk, which attested to the business function of a workshop master, and his special status as Secretary of the NGO. Under the glass of his desk lay a display of the business cards of some of his most valued customers—mainly army officers.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
© 2003 Society for Comparative Study of Society and History

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