This document discusses the growth of slums in developing world cities. It notes that rural farmers face many vulnerabilities that push them to cities, despite cities having poor infrastructure and opportunities. This has led to mass growth of urban slums, with some now home to over a million people. The document describes different types of informal housing in slums and the challenges of living without basic services like sanitation. It also discusses how slum communities are often forcibly relocated for beautification projects before international events.
It was my group presentation in 2nd semester, 2013. we people (group members) Jakir (Me) Jeul, papri, shahadat, Tanjia work heard for making a nice and informative presentation. I think It will helpful for you.
Brief deliberation on the concept of slum and the urban poor! This presentation talks of the slum condition and not particular the type of settlement like squatter or urban village or old city etc.
Factors like ambivalence of the ruling government, population explosion, dearth of housing and land has lead to squatter settlements. The reasons for these settlements are manifold. Read the following article to find out what gives rise to squatter settlements.
It was my group presentation in 2nd semester, 2013. we people (group members) Jakir (Me) Jeul, papri, shahadat, Tanjia work heard for making a nice and informative presentation. I think It will helpful for you.
Brief deliberation on the concept of slum and the urban poor! This presentation talks of the slum condition and not particular the type of settlement like squatter or urban village or old city etc.
Factors like ambivalence of the ruling government, population explosion, dearth of housing and land has lead to squatter settlements. The reasons for these settlements are manifold. Read the following article to find out what gives rise to squatter settlements.
Gentrification and its Effects on Minority Communities – A Comparative Case S...Premier Publishers
This paper does a comparative analysis of four global cities and their minority districts which have been experiencing the same structural pressure of gentrification. The main contribution of this paper is providing a detailed comparison of four micro geographies worldwide and the impacts of gentrification on them: Barrio Logan in San Diego, Bo-Kaap in Cape Town, the Mission District in San Francisco, and the Rudolfsheim-Fünfhaus District in Vienna. All four cities have been experiencing the displacement of minority communities due to increases in property values. These cities were chosen because their governments enacted different policies to temper the gentrification process. It was found that cities which implemented social housing and cultural inclusionary policies were more successful in maintaining the cultural and demographic make-up of the districts.
Presentation of thesis research into promoting positive change in existing suburban residential neighborhoods. Allowing infill development such as accessory dwelling units, duplexes, and lot splits can be useful for increasing diversity of housing types, which increases diversity of residents. Modifications to the road network and other neighborhood improvements can also enhance the livability of the community.
The City of Contrasts- The Story of Mumbai's Skyscrapers to Slum Area and Bac...yamunaNMH
Slums and skyscrapers are likely the two terms that are most frequently used when individuals and officials discuss how cities develop. The slums’ destitution and skyscrapers’ sterility are the Achilles’ heels of city planners and community leaders.
hidden community development among the urban poor informal settlers in metro...David Alegre III
This article investigates how informal urban settlers autonomously and substantially organise and develop their own communities in Metro Manila. Such a community is neither one which has been introduced by an outside third party nor one which has been organised by the residents to realise concrete objectives. We can verify that a community of informal settlers emerges in the guise of village endogamy networks, which arise paradoxically from chronic poverty and are formed without recognition.. The deepening of these networks provides families with incentives to reside permanently in their locality and undertake collective action to obtain property rights. Such networks spread across many sites of poverty in Metro Manila at the same time, and build open stages for enhancing and sharing local knowledge, which can be mobilised for development by the urban poor.
2. Cities Harvesting the World Agrarian Crisis
Poor farmers are increasingly vulnerable to any
exogenous shock: drought, inflation, rising
interest rates, or falling commodity prices.
Illness is also a huge rural push. For example, an
estimated 69% of Cambodian small peasants who
sell their land move to the city are forced to to do
so by medical debts.
“Rapacious warlords and chronic civil wars, often
spurred by the economic dislocations of debt-
imposed structural adjustment or foreign
economic predators were uprooting whole
countrysides.”
Despite ruined import-substitution, shrunken
public sectors, lack of necessary infrastructure,
educational facilities, or public health systems,
people are moving to the cities now more then
ever before.
Rural push factors outweigh negative urban pull
factors, which has led to an inevitable mass
population growth in urban slums.
Since 1970, slum growth everywhere in the South
has outpaced urbanization.
3. Slum Typology’s and housing locations
There are probably more than 200,000 slums on earth, ranging in population from a few hundred to more
than a million people.
Megaslums arise when shanty-towns and squatter communities merge in continuous belts of informal
housing and poverty, usually on the urban periphery.
“Housing is a verb”
The urban poor have to solve a complex equation as they try to optimize housing cost, tenure
security, quality of shelter, journey to work, and sometimes personal safety.
Homeless people sometimes move into abandoned homes and derelict hotels after the reach leave for
more attractive neighborhoods.
In sub-Saharan Africa, tenements are rare because of a historic urban core.
Examples of shelter strategies in Cairo:
1. Renting an apartment in the city core with a central location, secure tenure, and expensive rent.
2. Centrally located informal shelter often times on a rooftop, poor quality environment, cheap rent,
central access to job opportunities, and have no secure tenure.
3. The cheapest housing solution is to squat on publicly owned land, on the outskirts of the city, “down-
wind of poullution”, very high cost of commuting to work.
4. The most preferred solution is buy a house site in a semi-formal development area, with legal tenure,
far distance from jobs but are secure and have basic municipal services.
4. Pirate Urbanization
Flat peripheral land, even desert, has
market value.
Operates through an invisible real-estate
market.
Pirate settlements did not results from
land invasions, the land actually changes
hands through legal purchase.
It’s in effect the privatization of squatting.
Also known as Substandard Commercial
Residential Subdivisions (SCRSs).
In contrast to true squatters, pirate sub-
division residents obtain either a legal or
de facto title to their plot.
They are generally subdivided into
uniform lots with conventional street
grids.
Planned layouts, low service levels,
suburban locations, high tenure security,
non-conformity with urban development
plans, and self-help housing are the
generic features of SCRSs.
5. Living in Shit
The global sanitation crisis defies hyperbole. It’s origins, as with many Third World urban populations, are
rooted in colonialism.
Jakarta for example, still depends on open ditches for disposal of most of its wastewater.
“This privy is so dirty that the inhabitants can only enter or leave the court by wading through puddles of
stale urine and excrement.”
Even the richest cities only flush their excrement downstream or dump it into a nearby ocean.
Constant intimacy with other people’s waste is one of the most profound of social divides.
A study of 22 slums in India found 9 with no latrine facilities at all; in another 10, there were just 19 latrines
for 102,000 people.
Catch 22 for poor urban women:
They are expected to maintain a strict standard of modesty while lacking acces to any private means of hygiene, this is
thus devastating for women.
Men can urinate at any time at any place, whereas women can only be seen following the call of nature before sunrise
and after sunset.
People defecate all around the toilets, because the pit have been clogged for months or even years.
6. The City Beautiful
Slum dwellers dread the high-profile international events (dignitary visits, sporting events, international
festivals, etc) that come to the cities that they live in.
160,000 squatters were moved out of the media’s field of vision and dumped on Manila’s outskirts for a
Miss Universe Pageant, visit from President Gerald Ford, and World Bank meeting in subsequent years.
In preparation for the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) Summit, demolition crews attacked
the local slum. The residents formed a human wall and were met by a SWAT team armed with M16s and
looking to kill.
“The Plan” is to get rid of troublesome elements in the working-class barrios of the upper town by shunting
them to the outskirts.
The 1988 Seoul Olympic Games saw as many as 720,000 people forced out of their homes and to
relocated somewhere else.
Recently, the 2008 Beijing games saw 350,000 forced out of their homes for stadium construction.
“Whole city blocks disappear in a matter of days, the population loaded onto trucks and forcibly relocated to
the new townships that the government has established on rice fields outside the major cities.”
The most unprecedented mark came where 1.5 million residents (16% of the total urban population) were
removed from their homes as a result of the urban beautification program in Asia.