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Title: Lecture 18: Planet of Slums


1
Lecture 18 Planet of Slums
2
Outline
  • Inside a slum
  • The urban explosion
  • Explaining slum growth
  • Slum language
  • The future what can be done?

3
1. Inside a Slum

Javier Auyero
4
2. The Urban Explosion
  • UN 3.2 billion urbanites 2007, nearly 5 billion
    2030
  • 2030 60 in cities
  • Biggest increase Asia and Africa - poorest,
    least-urbanised, least able to cope
  • By 2017 nearly 500 cities of 1m
  • 2025 8 cities 20m - Tokyo, Mumbai, Manila,
    Dhaka, São Paulo, Mexico City, New York, and
    Kolkata

5
Mega-City GrowthA Developing-World Phenomenon
6
Africa, Asia catch up
7
Growth of the Mega-Cities
8
3. Explaining slum growth
Dharavi, Mumbai
Kibera, Nairobi
People prefer urban squalor to rural
hopelessness. THE ECONOMIST
9
(No Transcript)
10
Statistical Horrors
  • In 2005 the number of slum dwellers worldwide
    exceeded 1 billion (one third of the worlds
    urban population)
  • Ethiopia, Chad, Afghanistan and Nepal 90 of
    urban dwellers live in slums
  • 78.2 of the urban population of the worlds
    least developed countries live in slums
  • Mumbai is the global capital of slum dwelling
    (between 10 and 12 million people, with 1 million
    living on pavements)
  • The poorest urban populations are in Luanda,
    Maputo and Kinshasa, where child mortality (under
    5) exceeds 320 per 1000
  • One quarter of the worlds urban population live
    in absolute poverty (a condition characterised
    by severe deprivation of basic human needs,
    including food, safe drinking water, sanitation
    facilities, health, shelter, education and
    information. WHO, 1995)
  • Unless massive action is taken, by 2030 there
    will be 2 billion slum dwellers worldwide, and
    half of all urban dwellers will live in poverty

11
Qualitative horrors
  • Were not just talking about poor people living
    in classic shantytowns on the peripheries of
    Global South cities, but living on rooftops, in
    filled-in airwells in the centre of buildings in
    cages of wire netting erected to protect their
    few belongings on pavements in former
    graveyards (gt1 million people in Cairo) on
    swamps, floodplains, volcano slopes, unstable
    hillsides, rubbish mountains, chemical dumps,
    railroad sidings, desert fringes
  • The new urban precariat (as opposed to
    proletariat)

12
a) Rural-urban migration
  • Today we are seeing dramatic urban growth without
    economic growth no investment, no jobs,
    shrinking public sector, soaring cost of
    land/living. Why are people moving?
  • People move for the opportunity, if not the job.
    There is always somebody, 1 in 100, 1 in 1000, 1
    in 10,000, who has made it. The alternative is
    subsistence agriculture which runs the risk of
    starvation, or eviction by commercial
    agriculture/mechanization, or devastation by
    climate change.
  • Other factors people are displaced by wars and
    become refugees natural disasters.
  • Almost impossible now to tell where city ends and
    the countryside begins in many parts of the
    Global South, people no longer have to move to
    the city the city is growing so fast it moves to
    them.

13
  • Urbanization has been radically decoupled from
    industrialization, even from development per se.
    (p.13)
  • Echoes Henri Lefebvre (1968) in La Revolution
    Urbaine, who argued that urbanization had
    supplanted industrialization as the major vehicle
    of capital accumulation throughout the world, to
    the point where we could one day see the
    complete urbanization of the world.

14
b) Natural increase
  • Becoming an ever-increasing factor in slum
    expansion (now surpassing rural to urban
    migration)
  • Rate of growth of births over deaths in slums is
    increasing the population by tens of thousands of
    people every year

15
c) Structural Adjustment Policies
  • IMF/WB economic pre-conditions for the granting
    of loans. Beginning in the early 1980s short,
    sharp macro-economic shocks (currency devaluation
    to stop imports and encourage exports, removal of
    state subsidies on foodstuffs, water, transport,
    electricity), followed by economic deregulation,
    trade liberalisation, privatisation of public
    services.
  • Aim to get the state out of the development
    process - the market will provide via
    trickle-down. Governments were forced to
    radically downsize the public sector, with
    devastating consequences for the urban poor
    (education, housing, water, food, sanitation,
    health care etc etc)
  • People have thus become marginalised by
    market-oriented economic change, creating a new
    non-migrant, indigenous urban poor who are devoid
    of the incomes and basic human needs (and human
    rights) that perhaps their parents or
    grandparents had.

16
  • The weird logic of this economic programme
    seemed to be that to restore life to the dying
    economy, every juice had first to be SAPped out
    of the underprivileged majority of the citizens.
    The middle class rapidly disappeared, and the
    garbage heaps of the increasingly rich few became
    the food table of the multiplied population of
    abjectly poor. The brain drain to the oil-rich
    Arab countries and to the Western world became a
    flood.
  • Fidelis Odun Balogun (1995) Adjusted Lives
    Stories of Structural Adjustment (Princeton U.P.)
    p.80

17
The Washington Consensus
  • The World Bank has pursued the same set of
    anti-poverty policies for almost 40 years. These
    have three elements
  • Broad-based economic growth
  • Development of human capital, primarily through
    education
  • Minimum social safety nets for the poor
  • But it has pursued these policies by rigidly
    adhering to neo-liberal economic orthodoxy (see
    Joseph Stiglitz 2002)
  • Privatisation which tends to raise prices for
    the poor
  • Capital market liberalisation which can allow
    speculators to destabilise countries economies,
    as has happened in Asia and South America
  • Market-based pricing which raises the costs of
    basic foods and fuel for the poor and has caused
    rioting, particularly in South America, e.g.
    Bolivia, Ecuador and, recently, Argentina
    (economists should not be provoking riots around
    the world)
  • Free trade which is governed by World Trade
    Organisation (WTO) rules that severely
    disadvantage poorer countries/producers

18
4. Slum Language
  • The term slum was first published in 1812 in a
    glossary of London slang by James Hardy Vaux, but
    was equated with racket or criminal trade.
  • By the 1830s and 1840s, that use had shifted
    the poor were now living in slums (infected by
    cholera epidemics) rather than practicing them.
  • In late-Victorian Britain, the term slum didnt
    just describe poor areas it was used
    pejoratively, a comment on the supposed moral
    degeneracy of those who dwelled in poor areas.
    Read anything by Charles Dickens is it by
    chance that he housed Fagin and the Artful Dodger
    in a slum?
  • Worst of all, the official labelling of a poor
    area as a slum can justify its demolition and
    clearance (such as in Haussmans Paris, and in
    many slums in the Global South today)

19
Words are never innocent.
  • What makes the word slum dangerous is the
    series of negative associations that the term
    conjures up, the false hopes that a campaign
    against slums raises and the mischief that
    unscrupulous politicians, developers and planners
    may do with the term. .I am complaining about
    resuscitating an old, never euphemistic,
    stereotype one that was long ago denounced as
    dangerous and yet has now resurfaced in the
    policy arena.
  • Alan Gilbert (2007) The Return of the Slum
    Does Language Matter?, IJURR 31 (4) p.701.

20
UN operational definition
  • A slum household is a household that lacks any
    one of the following five elements
  • Access to improved water (access to sufficient
    amount of water for family use, at an affordable
    price, available to household members without
    being subject to extreme effort)
  • Access to improved sanitation (access to an
    excreta disposal system, either in the form of a
    private toilet or a public toilet shared with a
    reasonable number of people)
  • Security of tenure (evidence of documentation to
    prove secure tenure status, or de facto or
    perceived protection from evictions)
  • Durability of housing (permanent and adequate
    structure in non-hazardous location)
  • Sufficient living area (not more than two people
    sharing the same room)

21
5. The future what can be done?
  • The UNs 1999 Cities without Slums initiative
  • A major element of its Millenium Development
    Goals campaign
  • Two broad purposes
  • To publicise the seriousness of urban problems,
    especially in the Global South
  • To improve its ability to attract funding with
    which to tackle the issue

22
  • The Challenge of Slums.is mainly concerned
    with the shelter conditions of the majority of
    the urban poor. It is about how the poor struggle
    to survive within urban areas, mainly through
    informal shelter and informal income-generation
    strategies, and about the inadequacy of both
    public and market responses to the plight of the
    urban poor. But the report is also about hope,
    about building on the foundations of the urban
    poors survival strategies and about what needs
    to be done by both the public and
    non-governmental sectors, as well as by the
    international community, if the goal of adequate
    shelter for all is to have any relevance for
    todays urban poor.

23
The worlds biggest killer and the greatest
cause of ill health and suffering across the
globe is listed almost at the end of the
International Classification of Diseases. It is
given code Z59.5 -- extreme poverty. World
Health Organisation (1995) Seven out of ten
childhood deaths in developing countries can be
attributed to just five main causes - or a
combination of them pneumonia, diarrhoea,
measles, malaria and malnutrition. Around the
world, three out of four children seen by health
services are suffering from at least one of these
conditions. World Health Organisation (1996
1998).
24
Severe Deprivation of Basic Human Need
  • Almost a third of the worlds children have to
    live in dwellings with more than five people per
    room or which have a mud floor.
  • Over half a billion children (27) have no toilet
    facilities whatsoever.
  • Almost 400 million children (19) are using
    unsafe (open) water sources or have more than a
    15-minute walk to water.
  • About one in five children (aged between 3 and
    18) lack access to radio, television, telephone,
    computers or newspapers at home.
  • Fifteen percent of children under five years in
    the world are severely malnourished, almost half
    of whom are in South Asia.
  • 300 million children (14) have not been
    immunised against any diseases, or have had a
    recent illness causing diarrhoea and have not
    received any medical advice or treatment.
  • 144 million children aged between 7 and 18 (11)
    are severely educationally deprived - they have
    never been to school.
  • Source UNICEF, 2004

25
Champagne glass of income distribution
The stem of the glass is getting thinner. In
1960 the income of the wealthiest fifth was 30
times greater than that of the poorest fifth now
its more than 80 times greater.
26
The cost of achieving universal access to basic
social services
The Price of Life?
Need Annual cost (US billions)
Basic education for all 6
Basic health and nutrition 13
Reproductive health and family planning 12
Low cost-water supply and sanitation 9

Total for basic social services 40
27
The Cost of Food and Health for All
  • Over ten million of the worlds young children
    die each year and, in over half of these deaths,
    malnutrition is a contributory cause.
  • The cost of preventing these deaths is relatively
    small 13 billion a year for ten years would
    provide basic health and nutrition for every
    person on the planet (UNDP, 1997).
  • By comparison, 30 billion was spent on pizza in
    the US in 2002 (Pizza Marketing Quarterly, 2003)
    and 12 billion on dog and cat food (Euromonitor
    International, 2003).

28
Can Economic Growth Halve Poverty by 2015?
Developing World East Asia and Pacific Eastern Europe and Central Asia Latin America and Caribbean Middle East and North Africa South Asia Sub-Saharan Africa
Annual growth rate needed to halve world poverty by 2015 3.8 2.7 2.4 3.8 3.8 4.7 5.6
Historical growth 19601990 1.7 3.3 2.0 1.3 4.3 1.9 0.2
Total growth needed to halve world poverty by 2015 95 70 61 94 95 117 141
How likely is it that the annual economic growth
rate in Sub-Saharan Africa can be increased from
0.2 to 5.6 - a 28 fold increase?
29
Can Redistribution Halve Poverty by 2015?
Developing World East Asia and Pacific Eastern Europe and Central Asia Latin America and Caribbean Middle East and North Africa South Asia Sub-Saharan Africa
Poverty decline after a one standard deviation reduction in inequality 67 31 42 45 34 17 62

Source Besley, T. and Burgess, R. (2003)
Halving global poverty. Journal of Economic
Perspectives 17 (3) pp. 3-22.
30
Why is nothing done?
  • Neoliberal Concepts of Justice
  • A neoliberal philosophical position equates
    justice and liberty with freedom from intentional
    coercion. Intentionality is seen as the key
    concept for defining liberty.
  • Neoliberals argue that, although the operation of
    the market may result in mass death and disease,
    since it is not the intention of anyone that
    this should happen, no injustice occurs.
  • To take this argument about intentional coercion
    to its extreme would mean that a family starving
    in rural sub-Saharan Africa has more freedom
    than e.g. Bill Gates family, as the African
    family are not being intentionally coerced into
    paying taxes.

31
Friedrich von Hayek
  • Hayek developed this argument to its logical
    conclusion, that societies had no obligation to
    meet the social and economic needs of people, as
    societies did not exist.
  • In his 1979 Heidelberg lecture, he argued that
    the word social had no objective meaning as an
    adjective or a noun he stated that nobody knows
    what the social in fact is.
  • Hayek concluded that a social market economy is
    no market economy, a social constitutional state
    is no constitutional state, a social conscience
    is not conscience and that social justice is not
    justice.

32
Margaret Thatcher-Hayek!
  • In 1987, then UK Prime Minister, she spelt out
    Hayeks argument in simple terms
  • I think we've been through a period where too
    many people have been given to understand that if
    they have a problem, it's the government's job to
    cope with it. 'I have a problem, Ill get a
    grant.' 'Im homeless, the government must house
    me.' Theyre casting their problem on society.
    And, you know, there is no such thing as society.
    There are individual men and women, and there
    are families.

33
Effective and Efficient Anti-Poverty Measures
Progressive tax and income policies, with income
redistribution from rich to poor and from men
to women (in addition to redistribution of income
across an individuals life span by taxing and
reducing income levels in middle age balanced
with then paying social benefits to increase
income during childhood and old age). Active
labour market interventions to create higher
quality jobs. Enforcement of minimum standards
on wages and working conditions of the low paid
within an international framework. Universal
social insurance and public social services - the
basic needs services by introducing
internationally agreed minimum levels of benefit
Greater accountability and increased social
and democratic control over trans-national
corporations and international agencies, to
remedy the democratic deficit.
34
Some food for thought
  • Poverty is currently the worlds largest source
    of harm it causes more death, disease,
    suffering and misery than any other social
    phenomenon. Poverty is a bigger scourge of
    humanity than plague, pestilence or drought.
    Each year over 10 million children die from
    preventable causes which go untreated due to
    poverty.
  • Yet there is no need for any person in the 21st
    century, anywhere, to starve and rot in a slum,
    go without clean drinking water, toilets or
    access to basic health care and education.
    Providing poor people with all these things would
    not have any significant (or even noticeable)
    impact on the lifestyles of the rich. Poverty
    is not an act of god nor inevitable. It is a
    political choice. What is lacking is not
    sufficient money but the political will to end
    poverty.
  • In addition, all over the world, there have been
    social movements organised around fighting
    poverty and inequality. Well learn more about
    these on Wednesday.
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