Aller au contenu principal

page search

Community Organizations Urban Knowledge Exchange
Urban Knowledge Exchange
Urban Knowledge Exchange
Acronym
uKESA
Civil Society Organization

Location

Meiring Naude Rd
Lynnwood
Pretoria
Gauteng
South Africa
Working languages
anglais
Affiliated Organization
CSIR
University or Research Institution

The Council for Scientific and Industrial Research, commo

The Knowledge Exchange is a response to an identified need for increased information exchange in the Southern African region. It has been developed as a broad collaboration of partners, with the CSIR acting as the custodian.

The purpose of the Urban Knowledge Exchange is to improve the delivery of better quality human settlements, towns and cities by making reliable, evidence-based knowledge more widely accessible. It encompasses thematic areas such as sustainable human settlement development and management, better infrastructure and services, access to well-located land, efficient shelter production, a more functional residential property market, improved transport networks, more equitable urban development, good governance, building resilience and responding to climate change, and promoting more affordable housing finance.

The knowledge repository is devoted to promoting innovation and good practice for cities, towns, and villages through offering links to an online library, knowledge directory, upcoming events, moderated debates, portal (links to further hubs), and content uploading facility. With the aim to collaborate with existing platforms on various locational scales the project will further provide opportunities for global information sharing.

Members:

Resources

Displaying 31 - 35 of 45

Urban land markets in East Africa

Training Resources & Tools
Décembre, 2010
Ouganda
Tanzania
Kenya
Éthiopie

This case study draws on an analysis of urban land markets in the East African region. The research was undertaken by Paul Syagga, School of the Built Environment, University of Nairobi, and commissioned by Urban LandMark. Some learning and reflection activities based on the case study are provided. The next part of the document presents examples of how people access, trade and hold land in various East African cities. The final component of this document includes a summary of the key issues covered in the case study and recommendations arising from it.

A handbook on urban land markets for Africa

Manuals & Guidelines
Septembre, 2010
Zimbabwe
Zambie
Afrique du Sud
Malawi
Lesotho
Botswana

The handbook introduces key economic and related concepts explaining the functioning of urban land markets. By introducing key classical economic concepts, the handbook provides foundational economic terms that are often referred to in relation to urban land markets. In doing this, we do not imply that African land markets should or ought to 'fit' into neo-classical economic theories, nor do we propose that 'perfect' markets exist.

Towards managed land settlement

Conference Papers & Reports
Mars, 2010
South Africa

Recognising that the Managed Land Settlement (MLS) approach is not new to the South African housing and service delivery environment, the purpose of this report is to explore the lessons that can be learnt from programmes and projects which have adopted an MLS-like approach to greenfields development. The report contains five case studies from across South Africa, focusing on programmes that have been successfully implemented over the past 15 years. With funding from Urban LandMark, the report was commissioned by