Hostname: page-component-cd9895bd7-hc48f Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-12-23T12:40:25.759Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

In a “Half-dark, Half-light Zone”: Mobility, Precarity, and Moral Ambiguity in Vietnam's Urban Waste Economy

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  22 November 2018

Minh T.N. Nguyen*
Affiliation:
Minh T.N. Nguyen is Professor of Social Anthropology at Bielefeld University, Germany. She is also Visiting Professor at the University of Social Sciences and Humanities, Vietnam National University in Hanoi; [email protected]

Abstract

This article discusses the everyday practices of a mobile network of migrant waste traders originating from northern Vietnam, locating them in an expanding urban waste economy spanning across major urban centres. Based on ethnographic research, I explore how the expansion of the network is foregrounded by the traders’ dealing with the precarious nature of waste trading, which is rooted in the social ambiguity of waste and migrants working with waste in the urban order. Characterised by waste traders as a “half-dark, half-light zone”, the waste economy is unevenly regulated, made up of highly personalised ties, and relatively hidden from the public. It is therefore rife with opportunities for accumulating wealth, but also full of dangers for the waste traders, whose occupation of marginal urban spaces makes them easy targets of both rent-seeking state agents and rogue actors. While demonstrating resilience, their practices suggest tactics of engaging with power that involve a great deal of moral ambiguity, which I argue is central to the increasing precaritisation of labour and the economy in Vietnam today.

Type
Article
Copyright
Copyright © Institute for East Asian Studies, Sogang University 2018 

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Alexander, Catherine, and Reno, Joshua, eds. 2012. Economies of Recycling: The Global Transformation of Materials, Values and Social Relations. London and New York: Zed Books.Google Scholar
Allison, Anne. 2013. Precarious Japan. Durham, NC: Duke University Press.Google Scholar
Anh, Nguyen Tuan, Rigg, Jonathan, Thu Huong, Luong Thi, and Dieu, Dinh Thi. 2012. “Becoming and being urban in Hanoi: Rural-urban migration and relations in Viet Nam.” Journal of Peasant Studies 39(5): 11031131.Google Scholar
Arnold, Dennis. 2012. “Social margins and precarious work in Vietnam.” American Behavioral Scientist 57(4): 468487.Google Scholar
Arnold, Dennis, and John, Pickles. 2011. “Global work, surplus labor, and the precarious economies of the border.” Antipode 43(5): 15981624.Google Scholar
Barbieri, Magali, and Bélanger, Danièle, eds. 2009. Reconfiguring Families in Contemporary Vietnam. Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press.Google Scholar
Butler, Judith. 2004. Precarious Life: The Powers of Mourning and Violence. New York: Verso.Google Scholar
de Certeau, Michel. 1984. The Practice of Everyday Life. Berkeley, CA: University of California Press.Google Scholar
DiGregorio, Michael. 1994. Urban Harvest: Recycling as a Peasant Industry in Northern Vietnam. Honolulu: East-West Centre.Google Scholar
Endres, Kirsten W., and Leshkowich, Ann Marie, eds. 2018. Traders in Motion: Networks, Identities, and Contestations in the Vietnamese Marketplace. Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press, Southeast Asia Program Publications.Google Scholar
Endres, Kirsten W. 2014. “Making law: Small-scale trade and corrupt exceptions at the Vietnam–China border.” American Anthropologist 116(3): 611625.Google Scholar
Ettlinger, Nancy. 2007. “Precarity unbound.” Alternatives: Global, Local, Political 32(3): 319340.Google Scholar
General Statistics Office and United Nations Population Fund (GSO and UNFPA). 2016. Nationwide Internal Migration Survey 2015. Hanoi, Vietnam.Google Scholar
Gourou, Pierre. 1955. The Peasants of the Tonkin Delta: A Study of Human Geography. New Haven, CT: Human Relations Area Files.Google Scholar
Hewison, Kevin, and Arne L., Kalleberg. 2012. “Precarious work and flexibilization in South and Southeast Asia.” American Behavioral Scientist 57(4): 395402.Google Scholar
Le, Bach Duong, Linh Tran, Giang, and Thao Nguyen, Thi Phuong. 2011. Social Protection for Rural-urban Migrants in Vietnam: Current Situation, Challenges and Opportunities. Brighton: Center for Social Protection in Asia.Google Scholar
Lee, C. K., and Kofman, Y.. 2012. “The politics of precarity: Views beyond the United States.” Work and Occupations 39(4): 388408.Google Scholar
Leshkowich, Ann Marie. 2005. “Feminine disorder: State campaigns against street traders in socialist and late socialist Vietnam.” In Le Vietnam au féminin (Vietnam: Women's Realities), edited by Bousquet, Gisèle and Taylor, Nora, 187207. Paris: Les Indes savantes.Google Scholar
Luong, Hy V. 2009. Urbanization, Migration, and Poverty in a Vietnamese Metropolis: Hồ Chí Minh City in Comparative Perspectives. Singapore: NUS Press.Google Scholar
Mitchell, Carrie L. 2009. “Trading trash in the transition: Economic restructuring, urban spatial transformation, and the boom and bust of Hanoi's informal waste trade.” Environment and Planning A 41(11): 26332650.Google Scholar
Molé, Noelle J. 2012. Labor Disorders in Neoliberal Italy: Mobbing, Well-being, and the Workplace. Bloomington, IN: Indiana University Press.Google Scholar
Muehlebach, Andrea. 2012. The Moral Neoliberal: Welfare and Citizenship in Italy. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.Google Scholar
Muehlebach, Andrea. 2013. “On precariousness and the ethical imagination: The year 2012 in sociocultural anthropology.” American Anthropologist 115(2): 297311.Google Scholar
Neilson, Brett, and Rossiter, Ned. 2008. “Precarity as a political concept, or, Fordism as exception.” Theory, Culture & Society 25(7–8): 5172.Google Scholar
Nguyen, Minh T.N. 2018. “Money, risk taking and playing: Shifting masculinity in a waste-trading community in Northern Vietnam.” In Traders in Motion: Networks, Identities and Contestations in the Vietnamese Marketplace, edited by Endres, Kirsten and Leshkowich, Ann Marie, 105116. Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press.Google Scholar
Nguyen, Minh T.N. 2016. “Trading in broken things: Gendered performance and spatial practices in a northern Vietnamese rural-urban recycling economy.” American Ethnologist 43(1):116129.Google Scholar
Nguyen, Minh T.N. 2015. Vietnam's Socialist Servants: Domesticity, Gender, Class and Identity. London and New York: Routledge.Google Scholar
Nguyen, Minh T.N., and Meixuan, Chen. 2017. “The caring state? On welfare governance in rural Vietnam and China.” Ethics and Social Welfare 11(3): 230247.Google Scholar
Nguyen, Minh T. N., and Catherine, Locke. 2014. “Rural-urban migration in China and Vietnam: Gendered householding, space production and the state.” Journal of Peasant Studies 41 (5): 855876.Google Scholar
Rigi, Jakob. 2012. “The corrupt state of exception: Agamben in the light of Putin.” Social Analysis 56(3): 6988.Google Scholar
Sikor, Thomas, and To, Phuc Xuan. 2011. “Illegal logging in Vietnam: Lam Tac (forest hijackers) in practice and talk.” Society & Natural Resources 24(7): 688701.Google Scholar
Standing, Guy. 2011. The Precariat: The New Dangerous Class. London: Bloomsbury Academic.Google Scholar
Sykes, Karen. 2009. Ethnographies of Moral Reasoning: Living Paradoxes of a Global Age. New York: Palgrave Macmillan.Google Scholar
Tappe, Oliver. 2016. “Variants of bonded labour in precolonial and colonial Southeast Asia.” In Bonded Labour: Global and Comparative Perspectives (18th-21st Century), edited by Damir-Geilsdorf, Sabine, Lindner, Ulrike, Müller, Gesine, Tappe, Oliver, and Zeuske, Michael, 103132. Bielefeld: Transcript.Google Scholar
Turner, Sarah, and Schoenberger, Laura. 2012. “Street vendor livelihoods and everyday politics in Hanoi, Vietnam: The seeds of a diverse economy?Urban Studies 49(5): 10271044.Google Scholar
Waite, Louise. 2009. “A place and space for a critical geography of precarity?Geography Compass 3(1): 412433.Google Scholar
World, Bank. 2016. Vietnam's Household Registration System. Hanoi: World Bank and Vietnam Academy of Social Science.Google Scholar