Nogat Mani: Social Safety Nets for Tufi Migrants of ATS Settlement, Moresby, Papua New Guinea
Date
2017
Authors
Rooney, Michelle Nayahamui
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Abstract
Nogat mani, the Tok Pisin term expressing ‘we have no money’,
is a familiar refrain of migrants in Port Moresby, the capital
city of Papua New Guinea (PNG). In the absence of formal income
opportunities and affordable housing, many are forced to resort
to informal forms of shelter and income generation. Food and
shelter are particularly difficult to secure which is why many
rely on support from people of their own ethnic group.
One such group is the Tufi people of Oro Province who live in the
ATS squatter settlement located near the city’s airport. There,
kin and neighbors are important sources of support but,
paradoxically, also place severe demands on those who have food,
housing and money. Moreover, people must contribute to collective
undertakings or risk becoming alienated from this urban safety
net. This collective identity has to be balanced with the reality
of being marginal citizens in the increasingly cosmopolitan
city.
This thesis examines the livelihood and social safety strategies
of this group of Tufi migrants over the period from the mid-1990s
to 2013. It draws on a combination of ethnographic and
quantitative data based on fieldwork conducted in 2013,
reflective autoethnographic data and secondary sources. It
examines the changing forms of indigenous Melanesian value
systems in urban settings as they come into contestation with
neo-liberal systems of value which dominate access to basic needs
in the city.
Drawing on theoretical concepts of value, exchange, kinship and
urban space, this thesis provides a grounded account of
settlement life in PNG. It examines the challenges and responses
of the Tufi as marginal citizens in one PNG informal settlement
and demonstrates how collective identity is deployed to address
the many challenges encountered in urban life. The thesis makes
visible emerging forms of citizenship in urban PNG and the
paradoxes of collective action and identity.
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Keywords
Papua New Guinea, Port Moresby, Urban, Pacific, Informal Settlements, Urban Land and Housing, Urban Citizenship, Livelihoods, Social Safety Nets, Migration, Remittances, Security, Urban ethnicity and identity
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Type
Thesis (PhD)