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43 J. Soc. & Soc. Welfare 121 (2016)
Susu: Captalizing Development from the Bottom up

handle is hein.journals/jrlsasw43 and id is 501 raw text is: 




           Susu:  Capitalizing Development
                  from   the  Bottom   Up

                        DAVID  STOESZ

                        ISABELLA GrrAu

                     RICHARD  RODRIGUEZ

                     FRANK   THOMPSON

                     Kean   University
    Susu, a common way of saving money in the majority of devel-
    oping countries, has migrated to developed nations. Originating
    in the 18th century in Ghana and Nigeria, susu is an indigenous
    method of microfinance, benefiting poor and minority groups.
    Significantly, susu relies on social capital as collateral, enhanc-
    ing solidarity and building community. When American public
    assistance programs deny benefits to immigrants, susu becomes an
    important source of savings. The differentiation of susu from other
    savings strategies in the United States is explored.

    Key words: Susu, microfinance, micro small enterprises, finan-
    cial gain, rotating saving and credit associations

    Susu is a method  for immigrants  to establish credit in an
economically  adverse  environment.  Historically, indigenous
savings strategies represent the continuation of economic self-
help, which  indentured  Africans brought  to the U.S. In his
iconic text, From Slavery to Freedom, John Hope Franklin (1980)
chronicled a resourcefulness borne of necessity, as Africans ad-
justed to slavery, relying on custom and solidarity to survive.
Ante-bellum   mutual  aid societies emerged   throughout  the
South to provide health and life insurance, death benefits, and
orphanages.  Franklin noted that such societies served as im-
portant training grounds  where  Negroes   could secure busi-
ness experience, and  they helped develop  habits of self-help
that seemed  to be more imperative  as the new [20th] century
opened  (p. 289). That these  organizations emerged   was  a
testament  to human  perseverance  in the face of unremitting
Journal of Sociology & Social Welfare, September 2016, Volume XLIII, Number 3
                             121

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