Contested Land Use Changes - Slum Clearance
- Contested land use refers to areas of land where many stakeholders have views about how the land should be used
- This may lead to conflict between different groups, as they want the land for different purposes
- The main issues around contested land use are:
- The clearance of 'slums'
- Urban redevelopment
- Depletion of green space
'Slum' clearance
- The term 'slum' is used to describe:
- Illegal settlements or inadequate housing in LICs
- Older 19th-century housing in industrial areas in HICs
- The UN's definition of 'slum' is
Where the inhabitants suffer one or more of the following:
1. Lack of access to improved water source
2. Lack of access to improved sanitation facilities
3. Lack of sufficient living area
4. Lack of housing durability (poor building materials)
5. Lack of security of tenure (there is no protection against forced eviction)
- Clearance of these areas can be controversial
Illegal settlements in LICs
- The settlements are built illegally often on wasteland at the edge of cities in LICs
- Local authorities or local government may order them to be cleared:
- For new infrastructure developments, such as roads or train lines
- To improve the area
- This issue is contested because local governments or businesses typically decide whether to clear these areas
- These organisations have more power than the people living in the settlements
- 'Slum' clearance often involves forced evictions
- Any new housing is often too expensive for the original residents to afford
Dharavi, Mumbai
- Over 1.2 million people live in the illegal settlement of Dharavi, which covers an area of 1 square mile
- It has developed on low-lying land which used to be a waste tip and mangrove swamp
- Conditions in the informal settlement are often poor:
- Many houses are made from scrap materials
- Only 24% of people have access to clean water
- The level of toxic waste is three times the recommendation
- Over 4000 cases of disease a day are reported
- There is a strong community spirit
- Many people are employed in the informal sector and the annual business turnover is over $650 million a year
- The settlement has over 5000 businesses and 15 000 single-room factories
- The settlement is located next to Mumbai's financial district, which means the land is valuable
Contested land use in Dharavi
- Vision Mumbai in 2004 aimed to:
- Replace inadequate housing with high-rise tower blocks
- Improve water, sanitation and healthcare
- Improve transport
- Increase businesses
- By 2007, 45 000 homes were demolished and 200 000 people were moved
- The new apartment buildings were not popular
- They split communities apart
- People had to pay rent
- The apartments were very small
- Many people were made homeless because they could not prove they were Dharavi residents