Thesis (MTech (Architectural Technology))--Cape Peninsula University of Technology, 2017. / Informal settlements are increasing in the cities of the global South in line with the rapid
rate of urbanisation that is taking place in countries of this region. The growth of informal
settlements in these countries has been exacerbated by factors that are unique to this
region, factors such as scarcity of resources, colonial legacies and rapid urbanisation.
Cape Town, a city that relates to the global South both in terms of geographical location
and socio-economic context, has also seen a rapid growth of informal settlements,
particularly in the last two decades. Like other cities in this region, Cape Town has
ambitions of being regarded as a global city. Global cities are modelled on cities of the
global North such as London, New York and Tokyo. Beyond the economic prestige that is
generally associated with the cities of the global North, the imagery that they conjure up
is also seen as an inspiration to be emulated by cities across the world, and it does not
include informal settlements. As such, informal settlements generate a host of attitudes.
Attitudes towards informal settlements don’t just emanate from political authorities, but
emanate from across the spectrum that constitutes inhabitants and interest groups in
these cities, including the creators of informal settlements themselves. These individuals
and interests, according to their social standing and thus influence, have varying degrees
of agency in the matters related to informal settlements. The aim in this study is to probe
the effect of these attitudes on housing delivery to the poor. Attitudes not only influence
the choice of what is regarded as the norm, but also how any entity that is regarded as
the ‘other’ is evaluated.
Almost without exception, cities that have been characterised by large numbers of
informal settlements have attempted, without success, to eradicate informal settlements
from their urban fabrics. An overarching assumption in this study is that the resilience of
informal settlements says something about their necessity, and the failure by some, to
recognise this necessity or the utilitarian value of informal settlements is influenced by
attitudes.
This research is done by first using a literature review to elucidate on:
• the social condition, that is, the phenomenon of informal settlements,
• the relevant theories applicable to the academic field the thesis is anchored in
(architecture) and other social orders impacting architecture such as modernism,
• the construct of attitudes and its impacts on beliefs, evaluations and perceptions
on the affect of objects.
The Joe Slovo informal settlement is then used as an analytic case study to investigate the
effects of attitudes on the dynamics that have seen the site being transformed into what
had been conceived as a prototype for transforming informal settlements to formal
housing. The study shows that such transformations, although often carried out in the
name of changing the lives of the inhabitants of informal settlements, do not necessarily
entail them remaining at the site post its transformation. In the case of Joe Slovo, it
actually resulted in a sizeable number of the original inhabitants being relocated to a new,
less favourable site.
Identifer | oai:union.ndltd.org:netd.ac.za/oai:union.ndltd.org:cput/oai:localhost:20.500.11838/2549 |
Date | January 2017 |
Creators | Nziweni, Andy Thabo |
Contributors | van Graan, AD, Jordaan, J |
Publisher | Cape Peninsula University of Technology |
Source Sets | South African National ETD Portal |
Language | English |
Detected Language | English |
Type | Thesis |
Rights | http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/3.0/za/ |
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