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Participation in Upgrading of Informal Settlements : -a case study of the project “City In-situ Rehabilitation Scheme for Urban Poor Staying in Slums in City of Pune under BSUP, JNNURM”Fyhr, Karl January 2012 (has links)
Fyhr, Karl (2012). Participation in Upgrading of Informal Settlements -a case study of the project “City In-situ Rehabilitation Scheme for Urban Poor Staying in Slums in City of Pune under BSUP, JNNURM”. Fyhr is a student at Human Geography Department at Stockholm University. This thesis for the course Urban and Regional Planning has been supervised by Andrew Byerley. The aim is to put the participatory approach of slum upgrading in context of rationality. What are different stakeholders approaches towards participatory planning? Are there any potential conflicts of interests with the participation approach used in the Yerwada project? Who are actually participating in real practice? How can different ways of rational thinking be explained in the questions above? This thesis is based on a 10 weeks MFS-study in India. The methodology is a case- study of a slum-upgrading project in Yerwada slum located in the city of Pune. Focus is on different rationalities which are embedded in the project. Two main rationalities are identified, the professionals’ rationality contra the beneficiaries. A clash between the two rationalities can be identified. This clash can be reduced by influence of NGOs and CBOs cooperating with authorities and building a bridge between professionals and the urban poor. Key words: Yerwada, slum- upgrading, informal settlements, rationality, urban- poor, power, SPARC.
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The formation of gecekondu settlements in Turkey : the case of Ankara /Duyar-Kienast, Umut. January 2005 (has links)
Zugl.: Berlin, Techn. University, Diss., 2005.
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Developing Space: Slum Growth and Withering Institutions of Social Control in VenezuelaLeon, Daniel S. 21 February 2018 (has links)
Venezuela, a Latin American rentier state,
went from experiencing 11 homicides per
100,000 inhabitants in 1983 to 44 in 2002.
My dissertation project examines why this
significant increase in social violence took
place by analysing the relationship between
slum development and the withering of institutions
of social control in the country
after the 1970s. This article however only
discusses the conceptual framework behind
the dwindling of institutions of social
control. The hypothesis of this article (and
that of my dissertation) is that a Durkheimian
anomic gap was fomented in the Venezuelan
slums because transition to modernity
(rural-to-urban migration) did not
allow recreating institutions that promoted
norms of social interaction, which reduce
the possibility of violent conflict between
people. It concludes by reviewing the tentative
methodology that will be applied in
my dissertation to confirm or dismiss the
aforementioned hypothesis. / In Venezuela, einem lateinamerikanischen
Rentierstaat, stieg die Zahl der Totschläge
pro 100.000 Einwohner von 11 im Jahr 1983
auf 44 im Jahr 2002. In meiner Dissertation
wird untersucht, warum sich diese signifikante
Steigerung der sozialen Gewalt nach
den 1970er Jahren ereignet. Zu diesem
Zweck wird eine Analyse der Beziehung
zwischen Slumentwicklung und dem Weichen
von Institutionen der sozialen Kontrolle
vorgenommen werden. Dieser Artikel
beschreibt den konzeptionellen Rahmen
um diesen Kausalzusammenhang zu belegen.
Die Hypothese meines Forschungsvorhabens
ist, dass der rasante Übergang
in die Moderne (die Land-Stadt-Migration)
eine normfreie Zone entstehen ließ. Der
Artikel endet mit der Überprüfung der
vorläufigen Methodik, die in meiner Dissertation
die oben genannte Hypothese zu
negieren oder zu bestätigen sucht.
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From Organic to Organized:A Rehabilitation of Nochikuppam Slum, Chennai, IndiaNagarajan, Kaaviyaa Palaniandavan January 2017 (has links)
No description available.
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An overview of slum rehabilitation schemes in Mumbai, IndiaJagdale, Rohit H. 16 October 2014 (has links)
In the recent decades, the Government of India has implemented a unique approach to the problem of slum proliferation in Mumbai. By providing an innovative cross-subsidy to private developers, the administration has created a working model for Public-Private-Partnership in Slum Rehabilitation. This report traces the evolution of this model through an extensive literature review of the preceding schemes. It also critiques the models on its impact on public life and provides recommendations for future policy decisions. / text
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The Kijiji Kit: A Slum Upgrading Strategy for Nairobi, KenyaKim, Lily 23 January 2008 (has links)
This thesis is sited in Mukuru-Kwa-Njenga, a slum community in Nairobi, Kenya. Like many others around the world, this community faces issues of health, sanitation, mobility, and basic services. Through the investigation of these issues, a set of guidelines have been developed to help this slum community become a responsible and supportive environment that promotes participation from its residents, local governments, and the global population.
After first acknowledging the complexity of the situation with regards to the formation and growth of slums, and the multi-layered problems that exist within them, the guidelines presented here are combined and herein named “Kijiji Kit”. “Kijiji” means “communal settlement” in Swahili. Hence, the Kijiji Kit is a resource tool for slum communities that can help build communal living environments for the urban poor. It consists of probable methods of zoning processes (determined through site analysis), community infrastructure essentials (such as health care and educational facilities), and individual infrastructure systems (such as rainwater collection). It is not a physical entity but a long-term working model of the community operating on three scales: city, community, and individual. On a city scale, collaboration between governments, institutions, municipalities, public and private sectors, and the community is integral. The responsibilities of the state, specifically in terms of funding and policies, play a significant factor in strengthening urban slums. On a community scale, certain infrastructural systems and basic services are required, such as public transit, health care, and housing to ensure that proper support exists for the community to function effectively. Slum upgrading is one method that can begin helping communities develop resourcefully and independently. Finally, the individuals who form the community must be active participants in the processes that affect them. They must want change and be willing to put the time and dedication into the processes that will bring positive growth to their community.
Based on the basic needs of the most vulnerable population – the orphans – the Kijiji Kit is a comprehensive and holistic approach to improving life in urban slums and calls for an overlapping of many disciplines, including architecture. Architecture is an essential component in developing and structuring communities. This thesis explores the social impact of architecture and how it can bring change to both the physical and social environment of slum communities.
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The Kijiji Kit: A Slum Upgrading Strategy for Nairobi, KenyaKim, Lily 23 January 2008 (has links)
This thesis is sited in Mukuru-Kwa-Njenga, a slum community in Nairobi, Kenya. Like many others around the world, this community faces issues of health, sanitation, mobility, and basic services. Through the investigation of these issues, a set of guidelines have been developed to help this slum community become a responsible and supportive environment that promotes participation from its residents, local governments, and the global population.
After first acknowledging the complexity of the situation with regards to the formation and growth of slums, and the multi-layered problems that exist within them, the guidelines presented here are combined and herein named “Kijiji Kit”. “Kijiji” means “communal settlement” in Swahili. Hence, the Kijiji Kit is a resource tool for slum communities that can help build communal living environments for the urban poor. It consists of probable methods of zoning processes (determined through site analysis), community infrastructure essentials (such as health care and educational facilities), and individual infrastructure systems (such as rainwater collection). It is not a physical entity but a long-term working model of the community operating on three scales: city, community, and individual. On a city scale, collaboration between governments, institutions, municipalities, public and private sectors, and the community is integral. The responsibilities of the state, specifically in terms of funding and policies, play a significant factor in strengthening urban slums. On a community scale, certain infrastructural systems and basic services are required, such as public transit, health care, and housing to ensure that proper support exists for the community to function effectively. Slum upgrading is one method that can begin helping communities develop resourcefully and independently. Finally, the individuals who form the community must be active participants in the processes that affect them. They must want change and be willing to put the time and dedication into the processes that will bring positive growth to their community.
Based on the basic needs of the most vulnerable population – the orphans – the Kijiji Kit is a comprehensive and holistic approach to improving life in urban slums and calls for an overlapping of many disciplines, including architecture. Architecture is an essential component in developing and structuring communities. This thesis explores the social impact of architecture and how it can bring change to both the physical and social environment of slum communities.
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Parenting in urban slum areas : families with children in a shantytown of Rio de Janeiro /Kejerfors, Johan, January 2007 (has links)
Diss. Stockholm : Stockholms universitet, 2007.
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Christian education in children's school : an approach to contemporary challenges of children's Christian education in the slum Churches in Nairobi /Onguya, Maurice Ochieng. January 2009 (has links)
Zugl.: International Faith Theological Seminary (IFTS), Magisterarbeit, 2009.
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Arzneimittelgebrauch armer Bevölkerungsschichten in städtischen Elendsvierteln Perus : Möglichkeiten und Grenzen der Gesundheitserziehung zum rationalen Arzneimittelgebrauch /Knauth, Christopher. January 1991 (has links) (PDF)
Zugl.: Heidelberg, Universiẗat, Diss., 1990.
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