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SLUMS,
PROBLEMS,
MEASURES
PROF BHAVNA VERMA
PRESENT SITAUTION
The census report identified 13.8 million households - about 64 million people -
located in city slums nationwide. That's 17.4 percent of all urban households,
which account for roughly one-third of India's 1.2 billion people.( Census 2011).
Slum Population -India 65,494,6041
Maharashtra 11,848,4232
Andhra Pradesh 10,186,9343
Tamil Nadu 5,798,459
PRESENT SITAUTION
Almost half the world's urban population lives in slums. Asia has the largest number of slum dwellers
overall, with 554 million, while sub-Saharan Africa has the largest percentage of its urban population
living in slums — about 71 percent
The World's Largest Slums:
Khayelitsha in Cape Town (South Africa): 400,000.
Kibera in Nairobi (Kenya): 700,000.
Dharavi in Mumbai (India): 1,000,000.
Neza (Mexico): 1,200,000.
Orangi Town in Karachi (Pakistan): 2,400,000.
More than half of the world’s population lives in urban areas and by 2030 it is projected that over half of
residents in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs) will reside in cities (Montgomery, 2008).
Definition of slum
Slum as “one or a group of individuals living under the same roof in an urban
area, lacking in one or more of the following five amenities”:
1) Durable housing (a permanent structure providing protection from extreme
climatic conditions);
2) Sufficient living area (no more than three people sharing a room);
3) Access to improved water (water that is sufficient, affordable, and can be
obtained without extreme effort);
4) Access to improved sanitation facilities (a private toilet, or a public one shared
with a reasonable number of people); and
5) Secure tenure (de facto or de jure secure tenure status and protection against
forced eviction) (UN-HABITAT, 2006/7).
The word “slum” is often used to describe informal settlements within cities that
have inadequate housing and miserable living conditions. They are often
overcrowded, with many people scrammed into very small living spaces. Slums
are not a new phenomenon. They have been a part of the history of almost all
cities, particularly during the phase of urbanisation and industrialisation. Slums
are generally the only type of settlement affordable and accessible to the poor in
cities, where competition for land and profits is intense..
Section 3 of the Slum Areas (Improvement and Clearence) Act, 1956
defines slums as areas where buildings: are in any respect unfit for
human habitation, are by reason of dilapidation, overcrowding,
faulty arrangement and design of such buildings, narrowness or
faulty arrangement of street, lack of ventilation, light or sanitation
facilities, or any combination of these factors, are detrimental to
safety, health or moral.
Definition of Slums as per Census 2011
i. All notified areas in a town or city notified as ‘Slum’ by State, UT
Administration or Local Government, Housing and Slum Boards etc. under
any Statute including a ‘Slum Act’ are considered as Notified Slum.
ii. All areas recognized as ‘Slum’ by State/Local Government, UT
Administration, Housing and Slum Boards etc., which may have not been
formally notified as slum under any statute are categorized as Recognized
Slum.
iii. A compact area of at least 300 populations or about 60-70 households of
poorly built congested tenements, in unhygienic environment usually with
inadequate infrastructure and lacking in proper sanitary and drinking water
facilities in the State/UT are categorized as Identified Slums.
“Slum” or “Slum Area” means a compact settlement of at least
twenty households with a collection of poorly built tenements, mostly of
temporary nature, crowded together usually with inadequate sanitary and
drinking water facilities in unhygienic conditions. “Slum Dweller” means
any person residing within the limits of a slum area.(2011,Ministry Of
Housing & Urban Poverty,Alleviation,Government Of India).
Characteristics of the Slums
Physically, slums consist of clusters of huts comprising several rooms constructed with
temporary building materials, where each room is inhabited by a family sharing a common
latrine, without arrangements for water supply, drains, disposal of solid waste and garbage
within the slum boundaries.
Slums are characterized by
a) Lack of basic services,
b) Overcrowding,
c) high density doubtful and insecure tenure,
d) Inadequate housing,
e) Hazardous or precarious environments,
f) Lack of access to basic facilities,
g) Poverty or social exclusion.
It is to be understood that each locality, each metropolitan area
has different slum types and none of them could be subsumed
in one broad category. The slums are usually characterized by
inadequate housing, congestion, overcrowding and lack of
services
Types of slums
Slums of Hope- In These type of slum progressive attitude is visible ,slum dwellers have
their own constructed houses though they built it illegally. But the possibility of reformation is
always visible.
Slums of Despair- In this kind of slum the living condition are miserable. The hope of
development is rarely seen due to decreased level of domestic services.
 Unauthorized slums are those, which are simply encroachments by the poor people
either displaced from the city itself or retrenched from their work place, on the roadside
(locally called jhupri), canals (called khaldhar), or any vacant place (called udbastu) another
type of displacement is reported as displacement due to an excessive increase in family
size. It has been found that the predominant structure types in the slum areas are pukka,
semi-pukkaand kutcha (crude or imperfect).
Types of Slums
1 authorized slums are the hut type settlements on leased land from
landowners, which is let out to migrants;
2 The second type of slum called “thika tenant slums” where the
slum dwellers have taken possession at a fixed rent and have
constructed their houses;
3 Third types of slums are those constructed by zaminders
(landowners) themselves and let out to the slum dwellers. These
types of slums are locally called bustees;
4 The fourth type of slums is Refugee Resettlement Colonies
(locally called udbastu colonies) where land has been leased out for
99 years to the refugees from present-day.
Causes of Proliferation
OVER POPULATION - There is acute shortage of housing in urban areas and much of the
available accommodation is qualitatively of sub-standard variety. This problem has tended
to worsen over the years due to rapid increase in population, fast rate of urbanization and
proportionately inadequate addition to the housing stock.
MIGRATION - migration to urban areas puts pressure on the urban basic amenities, like
water supply, drainage, sewerage, housing, transport facilities, and so on, which are
already constrained in Indian cities. The financial resources of urban local bodies are
limited and increase in migration to urban areas creates problems for urban governance.
The main reason for slum proliferation is rapid and
non inclusive patterns of Urbanisation catalyzed by
increasing rural migration to urban areas. Slums in
India(A Statistical Compendium ,2015)
There are various reasons for creation of slums of which the most
important are as follows:
• Increased urbanization leading to pressure on the available land and
infrastructure, especially for the poor.
• Natural increase in the population of urban poor and migration from rural areas
and small towns to larger cities.
• Inappropriate system of urban planning which does not provide adequate space
for the urban poor in the City Master Plans.
• Sky-rocketing land prices due to increasing demand for land and constraints on
supply of land.
• Absence of programmes of affordable housing for the urban poor in most States.
• Lack of availability of credit for low income housing.
Increasing cost of construction.
Governmental Measures
National Slum Development Programme (NSDP), Night Shelters, Two Million
Housing Scheme, Accelerated Urban Water Supply Programme (AUWSP), and
Low-Cost Sanitation — provide for a wide range of services to the urban poor
including slum dwellers. They include identification of the urban poor, formation of
community groups, involvement of NGOs, self-help/thrift and credit activities, training for
livelihood, credit and subsidy for economic activities, housing and sanitation,
environmental improvement, community assets, wage employment and convergence of
services.
National Slum Development Programme (NSDP) The NSDP initiated in 1996 as
a scheme of Special Central Assistance for slum improvement, has been providing
additional central assistance to state governments to provide water supply and
sanitation among other facilities to the slums.
This scheme has been launched in 2001-02 to provide shelter or upgrade the
existing shelter of the people living below poverty line in urban slums implemented
in partnership with state governments who will set up the implementation machinery,
arrange for land where required and for the credit component for housing. The state
funds under the scheme will be in proportion to their slum population.
a) Jawaharlal Nehru National Urban Renewal Mission (JNNURM) which
was launched on 3rd December, 2005 with the objectives of augmenting
infrastructure facilities in cities and towns along with provision of shelter and
basic civic services to slum dwellers/urban poor. JNNURM aims at creating
‘economically productive, efficient, equitable and responsive Cities’ by a
strategy of upgrading the social and economic infrastructure in cities, provision
of Basic Services to Urban Poor (BSUP) and wide-ranging urban sector
reforms to strengthen municipal governance in accordance with the 74th
Constitutional Amendment Act, 1992.
Interest Subsidy Scheme for Housing the Urban Poor (ISHUP)
has been conceived for providing interest subsidy on housing urban poor
to make the housing affordable and within the repaying capacity of
Economically Weaker Section. The scheme encourages poor sections to
avail of loan facilities through Commercial Banks/HUDCO for the
purposes of construction of houses and avail 5% subsidy in interest
payment for loans upto Rs. 1 lakh.
Valmiki-Ambedkar Awas Yojana (VAMBAY) has been
introduced in 2001-02 to provide a shelter or upgrading the
existing shelter to BPL people in urban slums. Twenty per cent of
the total allocation under VAMBAY is provided for sanitation and
community toilets to be built for the urban poor and slum dwellers.
Rajiv Awas Yojana (RAY) has been launched in 2009, for the slum
dwellers and the urban poor. This scheme would aim to provide support for
shelter & basic civic and social services for slum redevelopment and for
creation of new affordable housing stock to States that are willing to assign
property rights to slum dwellers. The Slum Free City/State Plan is envisaged to
comprise of two parts— Part I- Strategy to redevelop existing slums and Part II
– Strategy for prevention of creation of slums, delineating the development of
affordable housing for the urban poor and revision to existing urban policy and
programmes for the prevention of slums. This plan would form the basis for
providing assistance to the States, after the scheme is approved.
“Pradhan Mantri Awas Yojana – Housing for All (Urban)” Mission for urban area will be
implemented during 2015-2022 and this Mission will provide central assistance to implementing
agencies through States and UTs for providing houses to all eligible families/ beneficiaries by 2022.
A beneficiary family will comprise husband, wife, unmarried sons and/or unmarried daughters. The
beneficiary family should not own a pucca house either in his/her name or in the name of any member
of his/ her family in any part of India to be eligible to receive central assistance under the mission.
States/UTs, at their discretion, may decide a cut-off date on which beneficiaries need to be resident of
that urban area for being eligible to take benefits under the scheme.
All statutory towns as per Census 2011 and towns notified subsequently would be eligible for
coverage under the Mission. States/UTs will have the flexibility to include in the Mission the Planning
area as notified with respect to the Statutory town and which surrounds the concerned municipal area.
Continued….
The mission will support construction of houses upto 30 square meter carpet area
with basic civic infrastructure. States/UTs will have flexibility in terms of determining
the size of house and other facilities at the state level in consultation with the
Ministry but without any enhanced financial assistance from Centre.
Slum redevelopment projects and Affordable Housing projects in partnership should
have basic civic infrastructure like water, sanitation, sewerage, road, electricity etc.
ULB should ensure that individual houses under credit linked interest subsidy and
beneficiary led construction should have provision for these basic civic services.
The minimum size of houses constructed under the mission under each component
should conform to the standards provided in National Building Code (NBC). All
houses built or expanded under the Mission should essentially have toilet facility.
The houses under the mission should be designed and constructed to meet the
requirements of structural safety against earthquake, flood, cyclone, landslides etc.
conforming to the National Building Code and other relevant Bureau of Indian
Standards (BIS) codes.
References
Montgomery Mark R. The Urban Transformation of the Developing World.
Science. 2008;319:761–764. [PubMed]
Un-Habitat. State of the World’s Cities 2006/2007 [Online] Nairobi,
Kenya: 2006/7.
2011,Ministry Of Housing & Urban Poverty,Alleviation,Government Of
India
(A Statistical Compendium ,2015Government of India Ministry of
Housing and Urban Poverty Alleviation, National Buildings Organization
page no.1)
Census of India 2011.
THANK YOU

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Slum problems and measures

  • 2. PRESENT SITAUTION The census report identified 13.8 million households - about 64 million people - located in city slums nationwide. That's 17.4 percent of all urban households, which account for roughly one-third of India's 1.2 billion people.( Census 2011). Slum Population -India 65,494,6041 Maharashtra 11,848,4232 Andhra Pradesh 10,186,9343 Tamil Nadu 5,798,459
  • 3. PRESENT SITAUTION Almost half the world's urban population lives in slums. Asia has the largest number of slum dwellers overall, with 554 million, while sub-Saharan Africa has the largest percentage of its urban population living in slums — about 71 percent The World's Largest Slums: Khayelitsha in Cape Town (South Africa): 400,000. Kibera in Nairobi (Kenya): 700,000. Dharavi in Mumbai (India): 1,000,000. Neza (Mexico): 1,200,000. Orangi Town in Karachi (Pakistan): 2,400,000. More than half of the world’s population lives in urban areas and by 2030 it is projected that over half of residents in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs) will reside in cities (Montgomery, 2008).
  • 4. Definition of slum Slum as “one or a group of individuals living under the same roof in an urban area, lacking in one or more of the following five amenities”: 1) Durable housing (a permanent structure providing protection from extreme climatic conditions); 2) Sufficient living area (no more than three people sharing a room); 3) Access to improved water (water that is sufficient, affordable, and can be obtained without extreme effort); 4) Access to improved sanitation facilities (a private toilet, or a public one shared with a reasonable number of people); and 5) Secure tenure (de facto or de jure secure tenure status and protection against forced eviction) (UN-HABITAT, 2006/7).
  • 5. The word “slum” is often used to describe informal settlements within cities that have inadequate housing and miserable living conditions. They are often overcrowded, with many people scrammed into very small living spaces. Slums are not a new phenomenon. They have been a part of the history of almost all cities, particularly during the phase of urbanisation and industrialisation. Slums are generally the only type of settlement affordable and accessible to the poor in cities, where competition for land and profits is intense..
  • 6. Section 3 of the Slum Areas (Improvement and Clearence) Act, 1956 defines slums as areas where buildings: are in any respect unfit for human habitation, are by reason of dilapidation, overcrowding, faulty arrangement and design of such buildings, narrowness or faulty arrangement of street, lack of ventilation, light or sanitation facilities, or any combination of these factors, are detrimental to safety, health or moral.
  • 7. Definition of Slums as per Census 2011 i. All notified areas in a town or city notified as ‘Slum’ by State, UT Administration or Local Government, Housing and Slum Boards etc. under any Statute including a ‘Slum Act’ are considered as Notified Slum. ii. All areas recognized as ‘Slum’ by State/Local Government, UT Administration, Housing and Slum Boards etc., which may have not been formally notified as slum under any statute are categorized as Recognized Slum. iii. A compact area of at least 300 populations or about 60-70 households of poorly built congested tenements, in unhygienic environment usually with inadequate infrastructure and lacking in proper sanitary and drinking water facilities in the State/UT are categorized as Identified Slums.
  • 8. “Slum” or “Slum Area” means a compact settlement of at least twenty households with a collection of poorly built tenements, mostly of temporary nature, crowded together usually with inadequate sanitary and drinking water facilities in unhygienic conditions. “Slum Dweller” means any person residing within the limits of a slum area.(2011,Ministry Of Housing & Urban Poverty,Alleviation,Government Of India).
  • 9. Characteristics of the Slums Physically, slums consist of clusters of huts comprising several rooms constructed with temporary building materials, where each room is inhabited by a family sharing a common latrine, without arrangements for water supply, drains, disposal of solid waste and garbage within the slum boundaries. Slums are characterized by a) Lack of basic services, b) Overcrowding, c) high density doubtful and insecure tenure, d) Inadequate housing, e) Hazardous or precarious environments, f) Lack of access to basic facilities, g) Poverty or social exclusion.
  • 10. It is to be understood that each locality, each metropolitan area has different slum types and none of them could be subsumed in one broad category. The slums are usually characterized by inadequate housing, congestion, overcrowding and lack of services
  • 11. Types of slums Slums of Hope- In These type of slum progressive attitude is visible ,slum dwellers have their own constructed houses though they built it illegally. But the possibility of reformation is always visible. Slums of Despair- In this kind of slum the living condition are miserable. The hope of development is rarely seen due to decreased level of domestic services.  Unauthorized slums are those, which are simply encroachments by the poor people either displaced from the city itself or retrenched from their work place, on the roadside (locally called jhupri), canals (called khaldhar), or any vacant place (called udbastu) another type of displacement is reported as displacement due to an excessive increase in family size. It has been found that the predominant structure types in the slum areas are pukka, semi-pukkaand kutcha (crude or imperfect).
  • 12. Types of Slums 1 authorized slums are the hut type settlements on leased land from landowners, which is let out to migrants; 2 The second type of slum called “thika tenant slums” where the slum dwellers have taken possession at a fixed rent and have constructed their houses; 3 Third types of slums are those constructed by zaminders (landowners) themselves and let out to the slum dwellers. These types of slums are locally called bustees; 4 The fourth type of slums is Refugee Resettlement Colonies (locally called udbastu colonies) where land has been leased out for 99 years to the refugees from present-day.
  • 13. Causes of Proliferation OVER POPULATION - There is acute shortage of housing in urban areas and much of the available accommodation is qualitatively of sub-standard variety. This problem has tended to worsen over the years due to rapid increase in population, fast rate of urbanization and proportionately inadequate addition to the housing stock. MIGRATION - migration to urban areas puts pressure on the urban basic amenities, like water supply, drainage, sewerage, housing, transport facilities, and so on, which are already constrained in Indian cities. The financial resources of urban local bodies are limited and increase in migration to urban areas creates problems for urban governance.
  • 14. The main reason for slum proliferation is rapid and non inclusive patterns of Urbanisation catalyzed by increasing rural migration to urban areas. Slums in India(A Statistical Compendium ,2015)
  • 15. There are various reasons for creation of slums of which the most important are as follows: • Increased urbanization leading to pressure on the available land and infrastructure, especially for the poor. • Natural increase in the population of urban poor and migration from rural areas and small towns to larger cities. • Inappropriate system of urban planning which does not provide adequate space for the urban poor in the City Master Plans. • Sky-rocketing land prices due to increasing demand for land and constraints on supply of land. • Absence of programmes of affordable housing for the urban poor in most States. • Lack of availability of credit for low income housing. Increasing cost of construction.
  • 16. Governmental Measures National Slum Development Programme (NSDP), Night Shelters, Two Million Housing Scheme, Accelerated Urban Water Supply Programme (AUWSP), and Low-Cost Sanitation — provide for a wide range of services to the urban poor including slum dwellers. They include identification of the urban poor, formation of community groups, involvement of NGOs, self-help/thrift and credit activities, training for livelihood, credit and subsidy for economic activities, housing and sanitation, environmental improvement, community assets, wage employment and convergence of services.
  • 17. National Slum Development Programme (NSDP) The NSDP initiated in 1996 as a scheme of Special Central Assistance for slum improvement, has been providing additional central assistance to state governments to provide water supply and sanitation among other facilities to the slums. This scheme has been launched in 2001-02 to provide shelter or upgrade the existing shelter of the people living below poverty line in urban slums implemented in partnership with state governments who will set up the implementation machinery, arrange for land where required and for the credit component for housing. The state funds under the scheme will be in proportion to their slum population.
  • 18. a) Jawaharlal Nehru National Urban Renewal Mission (JNNURM) which was launched on 3rd December, 2005 with the objectives of augmenting infrastructure facilities in cities and towns along with provision of shelter and basic civic services to slum dwellers/urban poor. JNNURM aims at creating ‘economically productive, efficient, equitable and responsive Cities’ by a strategy of upgrading the social and economic infrastructure in cities, provision of Basic Services to Urban Poor (BSUP) and wide-ranging urban sector reforms to strengthen municipal governance in accordance with the 74th Constitutional Amendment Act, 1992.
  • 19. Interest Subsidy Scheme for Housing the Urban Poor (ISHUP) has been conceived for providing interest subsidy on housing urban poor to make the housing affordable and within the repaying capacity of Economically Weaker Section. The scheme encourages poor sections to avail of loan facilities through Commercial Banks/HUDCO for the purposes of construction of houses and avail 5% subsidy in interest payment for loans upto Rs. 1 lakh.
  • 20. Valmiki-Ambedkar Awas Yojana (VAMBAY) has been introduced in 2001-02 to provide a shelter or upgrading the existing shelter to BPL people in urban slums. Twenty per cent of the total allocation under VAMBAY is provided for sanitation and community toilets to be built for the urban poor and slum dwellers.
  • 21. Rajiv Awas Yojana (RAY) has been launched in 2009, for the slum dwellers and the urban poor. This scheme would aim to provide support for shelter & basic civic and social services for slum redevelopment and for creation of new affordable housing stock to States that are willing to assign property rights to slum dwellers. The Slum Free City/State Plan is envisaged to comprise of two parts— Part I- Strategy to redevelop existing slums and Part II – Strategy for prevention of creation of slums, delineating the development of affordable housing for the urban poor and revision to existing urban policy and programmes for the prevention of slums. This plan would form the basis for providing assistance to the States, after the scheme is approved.
  • 22. “Pradhan Mantri Awas Yojana – Housing for All (Urban)” Mission for urban area will be implemented during 2015-2022 and this Mission will provide central assistance to implementing agencies through States and UTs for providing houses to all eligible families/ beneficiaries by 2022. A beneficiary family will comprise husband, wife, unmarried sons and/or unmarried daughters. The beneficiary family should not own a pucca house either in his/her name or in the name of any member of his/ her family in any part of India to be eligible to receive central assistance under the mission. States/UTs, at their discretion, may decide a cut-off date on which beneficiaries need to be resident of that urban area for being eligible to take benefits under the scheme. All statutory towns as per Census 2011 and towns notified subsequently would be eligible for coverage under the Mission. States/UTs will have the flexibility to include in the Mission the Planning area as notified with respect to the Statutory town and which surrounds the concerned municipal area.
  • 23. Continued…. The mission will support construction of houses upto 30 square meter carpet area with basic civic infrastructure. States/UTs will have flexibility in terms of determining the size of house and other facilities at the state level in consultation with the Ministry but without any enhanced financial assistance from Centre. Slum redevelopment projects and Affordable Housing projects in partnership should have basic civic infrastructure like water, sanitation, sewerage, road, electricity etc. ULB should ensure that individual houses under credit linked interest subsidy and beneficiary led construction should have provision for these basic civic services. The minimum size of houses constructed under the mission under each component should conform to the standards provided in National Building Code (NBC). All houses built or expanded under the Mission should essentially have toilet facility. The houses under the mission should be designed and constructed to meet the requirements of structural safety against earthquake, flood, cyclone, landslides etc. conforming to the National Building Code and other relevant Bureau of Indian Standards (BIS) codes.
  • 24. References Montgomery Mark R. The Urban Transformation of the Developing World. Science. 2008;319:761–764. [PubMed] Un-Habitat. State of the World’s Cities 2006/2007 [Online] Nairobi, Kenya: 2006/7. 2011,Ministry Of Housing & Urban Poverty,Alleviation,Government Of India (A Statistical Compendium ,2015Government of India Ministry of Housing and Urban Poverty Alleviation, National Buildings Organization page no.1) Census of India 2011.