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Issues informal settlements related Blog post
There are 331 content items of different types and languages related to informal settlements on the Land Portal.
Displaying 25 - 29 of 29

Chicoco Collective Human City Project

13 August 2018
Michael Uwemedimo

OUR CITY: WHY WE WORK WHERE WE WORK

‘Chicoco’ means mud, the black, fibrous mud that people living in Port Harcourt’s waterfront communities cut from the mangroves and throw down on the river’s edge to reclaim land from the creeks. They build their homes on this mud.

‘MANY VOICES MAKE A CITY. SOME PEOPLE ARE TRYING TO TEAR THE CITY DOWN. BUT WE ARE CITY BUILDERS AND THIS IS OUR RHYTHM, OUR RIGHT, OUR VOICE.’

Improving tenure security through partnership and collaboration with the GLTN

27 June 2018
Sarah Nandudu

The National Slum Dwellers Federation of Uganda (NSDFU) is a network of approximately 350 community groups with a membership of approximately 38,000 people. NSDFU is a member of the Shack/Slum Dwellers International (SDI) network, a transnational network of the urban poor founded in 1996, and which brings together over a million federated slum dwellers in 30 countries in Africa, Asia, and Latin America.


A New Response to Informal Settlements

26 December 2010
Mr. Mark Misselhorn

Government should address informal settlement housing backlog in the country. Addressing challenges posed by informal settlements will help government to meet the United Nations Millennium Development Goals such as providing access to basic water and sanitation. Underlying socio-economic causes of informal settlements should be tackled. When addressing challenges posed by informal settlements, government should provide the urban poor with cost effective access to urban environments.

Using Technology to Plan for Africa’s Urban Expansion

By Sarah Logan and Mallory Baxter


African cities are rapidly expanding as the number of urban residents rises due to rural-urban migration and population growth. Ad hoc urban expansion contributes to an increase in unplanned settlements, urban poverty and inequality, and constraints on new residents, who are attempting to secure access to adequate housing, property rights, employment, and basic services.