The document discusses the problems faced by slum dwellers in India. It outlines several key issues: (1) slum dwellers often lack secure tenure or live in informal settlements; (2) housing is frequently substandard and built with inadequate materials; (3) basic necessities like water, sanitation, and electricity are often lacking. Additional problems include overcrowding, unhealthy living conditions, poverty, and lack of schools and health centers. The government has yet to adequately address the many issues challenging slum populations in India.
The document discusses the problems faced by slum dwellers in India. It outlines several key issues: (1) slum dwellers often lack secure tenure or live in informal settlements; (2) housing is frequently substandard and built with inadequate materials; (3) basic necessities like water, sanitation, and electricity are often lacking. Additional problems include overcrowding, unhealthy living conditions, poverty, and lack of schools and health centers. The government has yet to adequately address the many issues challenging slum populations in India.
The document discusses the problems faced by slum dwellers in India. It outlines several key issues: (1) slum dwellers often lack secure tenure or live in informal settlements; (2) housing is frequently substandard and built with inadequate materials; (3) basic necessities like water, sanitation, and electricity are often lacking. Additional problems include overcrowding, unhealthy living conditions, poverty, and lack of schools and health centers. The government has yet to adequately address the many issues challenging slum populations in India.
The document discusses the problems faced by slum dwellers in India. It outlines several key issues: (1) slum dwellers often lack secure tenure or live in informal settlements; (2) housing is frequently substandard and built with inadequate materials; (3) basic necessities like water, sanitation, and electricity are often lacking. Additional problems include overcrowding, unhealthy living conditions, poverty, and lack of schools and health centers. The government has yet to adequately address the many issues challenging slum populations in India.
The word “slum” is used to describe informal settlements within cities with inadequate housing and miserable living conditions. They are often overcrowded, with many people crammed into very small living spaces. Slums are not a new phenomenon as they have been a part of almost all cities, particularly during a time 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. The main reason for slum proliferation is rapid and non- inclusive patterns of urbanisation catalysed by increasing rural migration to urban areas.
Problems Faced by the Slum Dwellers in India
The problems faced by the people living as slum dwellers in India have become significant concerns for the government. Slums are considered the major issue within many urban areas; particularly transportation, population, health, and safety. Considering today’s poor urban environmental quality in India, most families affected by urban development projects are located in slum areas under consideration for resettlement or rehabilitation. There is a need to examine slum areas and their living conditions and determine the most critical and problematic zone of the slums. The Government of India has not been able to solve the problems that are strangling the entire population of Indian slums. THE PROBLEMS OF SLUMS TOWN PLANNING
Insecure Tenure, Irregular or Informal Settlements
A number of slums have considered lack of security of tenure as a central characteristic of slums and regard lack of formal document entitling the occupant to occupy the land or structure as prima facie evidence of illegality and slum occupation. Informal or unplanned settlements are often regarded as synonymous with slums. Mostly emphasise both informality of occupation and the non- compliance of settlements with land-use plans. The factors contributing to non- compliance are settlements built on land reserved for non-residential purposes or invasions of non-urban land.
Substandard Housing or Illegal and Inadequate Building
Structures Many cities have building standards that set minimum requirements for residential buildings. Slum areas have been associated with a high number of substandard housing structures, often built with non-permanent materials unsuitable for housing given local conditions of climate and location. Factors contributing to the structure being considered substandard are, for example, earthen floors, mud-and-wattle walls or straw roofs. Various space and dwelling placement bylaws may also be extensively violated THE PROBLEMS OF SLUMS TOWN PLANNING
Lack of Basic Necessities
Lack of basic necessities is one of the most frequently mentioned characteristics of slum definitions worldwide. Lack of access to improved sanitation facilities and improved water sources is the most important feature, sometimes supplemented by the absence of waste collection systems, electricity supply, surfaced roads and footpaths, street lighting and rainwater drainage.
Overcrowding and High Density
Overcrowding has been associated with a low space per person living in an area, high occupancy rates, cohabitation by different families and a high number of single-room units. Mostly slum-dwelling units are overcrowded, with five to six and more persons sharing a one-room unit used for cooking, sleeping and living.
MADE BY PURU VASHISHTHA / 4TH YEAR
THE PROBLEMS OF SLUMS TOWN PLANNING
Unhealthy Living Conditions and Hazardous Locations
Unhealthy living conditions result from a lack of basic services, with visible, open sewers, lack of pathways, uncontrolled dumping of waste, polluted environments, etc. their houses can be built on hazardous locations or land unsuitable for settlement, such as floodplains, in proximity to industrial plants with toxic emissions or waste disposal sites, and on the areas subject to a landslip. The settlement layout may be hazardous because of a lack of access ways and high densities of dilapidated structures.
Poverty and Social Exclusion
Income or capability poverty is considered, with some exceptions, as a central characteristic of slum areas. It is not seen as an inherent characteristic of slums, but as a cause (and, to a large extent, a consequence) of slum conditions. Slum conditions are physical and statutory manifestations that create barriers to human and social development. Furthermore, slums are social exclusion areas that are often perceived to have high levels of crime and other social dislocation measures. In some definitions, such areas are associated with certain vulnerable groups of the population, such as recent immigrants, internally displaced persons or ethnic minorities
Minimum Settlement Size
Many slums also require some minimum settlement size for an area to be considered a slum, so that the slum constitutes a distinct precinct and is not a single dwelling. Examples are the municipal slum definition of Delhi that requires a minimum of 700 square meters to be occupied by huts, or the Indian census definition, which requires at least 300 population or 60 households living in a settlement cluster. THE PROBLEMS OF SLUMS TOWN PLANNING
Water supply, Sanitation and Drainage Facilities
Inadequate water supply facilities and poor sanitary conditions can have a deleterious impact on household outcomes. As because of continued urban migration, a congregation of urban poor in slums without safe water supply, inadequate sanitation facilities and increasing resources constraints have led to poor quality of life and community health in slums. It can have also been seen that slums dwellers in India do not have a drainage system of any type. This is another problem of causing infections and deaths because of not sufficient hygiene. As Hindrise supports the government initiative to have proper sanitation facilities, we are helping build up public toilets. We especially are ensuring to spread awareness regarding sanitation and hygiene issues.
Availability of Schools and Health Centers
Over 90% of the slums have a primary school within one kilometre. Likewise, less than 50 % of the slums have a government hospital within one kilometre. We at Hindrise Foundation consider it a need of an hour and has initiated building up the primary health centres in the slums and our volunteers have campaigns to spread the awareness for health services among slum dwellers in India.