Slums and Sanitation
Slums and Sanitation
Slums and Sanitation
housing units of weak build quality and often associated with poverty. The
infrastructure in slums is often deteriorated or incomplete, and they are primarily
inhabited by impoverished people. Although slums are usually located in urban
areas, in some countries they can be located in suburban areas where housing
quality is low and living conditions are poor. While slums differ in size and other
characteristics, most lack reliable sanitation services, supply of clean water, reliable
electricity, law enforcement, and other basic services. Slum residences vary
from shanty houses to professionally built dwellings which, because of poor-quality
construction or lack of basic maintenance, have deteriorated.
Slums form and grow in different parts of the world for many different reasons.
Causes include rapid rural-to-urban migration, economic stagnation and depression,
high unemployment, poverty, informal economy, forced or manipulated
ghettoization, poor planning, politics, natural disasters, and social
conflicts. Strategies tried to reduce and transform slums in different countries, with
varying degrees of success, include a combination of slum removal, slum relocation,
slum upgrading, urban planning with citywide infrastructure development, and public
housing.
• Developing Countries like India need to recognise that the slum dwellers
and not just beneficiaries of development. Developing cities requires local
solutions. Local authorities need to be empowered with financial and
human resources to deliver services and infrastructure to the slum dwellers
in India. Cities must draw up local long-term strategies for improving the
lives of slum dwellers in India.
• State governments have to develop strategies to prevent the formation of
new slums. These should include access to affordable land, reasonably
priced materials, employment opportunities, and basic infrastructure and
social services.
• Public investments must focus on providing access to basic services and
infrastructure. The cities need to invest in housing, water, sanitation,
energy, and urban services, such as garbage disposal. These services and
infrastructure must reach the poor living in informal settlements.
• The transportation needs and safety concerns of a city’s poorest residents
should be a high priority in planning urban transportation systems, which
can expand the choices people have regarding where to live and work.
• Building codes and regulations should be realistic and enforceable and
reflect the local community’s lifestyle and needs. For example, this means
that they may have to be flexible enough to allow housing that is built
incrementally, out of low-cost materials and on small plots of land.
POOR SANITATION
In many instances, the urban poor live illegally in areas “deemed unfit for
habitation,” making the residents “officially invisible Without permission
to live on the land, they have no access to government support for
sanitation or health care programs. These conditions do not only affect
the people who live in them; their effects influence the rest of the city as
well. Public health officials regard slums and encampments as threats to
the health and safety of people who live or work nearby In this way, the
plight of the “invisible” spills into the visible sector, producing recognized
health outcomes.
Benefits of improved sanitation extend well beyond reducing the risk of diarrhoea. These
include:
• reducing the spread of intestinal worms, schistosomiasis and trachoma, which are
neglected tropical diseases that cause suffering for millions;
• reducing the severity and impact of malnutrition;
• promoting dignity and boosting safety, particularly among women and girls;
• promoting school attendance: girls’ school attendance is particularly boosted by the
provision of separate sanitary facilities;
• reducing the spread of antimicrobial resistance;
• potential recovery of water, renewable energy and nutrients from faecal waste; and
• potential to mitigate water scarcity through safe use of wastewater for irrigation
especially in areas most affected by climate change.
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