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Addressing informal settlement growth in Namibia / B. Weber

By: Material type: TextTextLanguage: English Publication details: Windhoek: Environmental Information Service, 2017Description: 10 pages, figures, 30 cmISSN:
  • 2026-8327
Subject(s): Summary: Namibia is undergoing a rapid and major transition from a rural society to a largely urban one. This transition is most visible in rapid urban growth, especially in informal settlements that accommodate poor families in shacks on the edges of towns. Namibia's urban areas now have some 140,000 informal houses, a number likely to double over the coming seven or eight years if this trend is not addressed urgently. The economic, social and environmental costs of informal growth and unplanned urban development are huge for Namibia as a country, and as a society. This article is largely based on results from recent research on informal settlements in Namibia, implemented by Development Workshop Namibia. It provides information about the growth and characteristics of informal settlements in Namibia and describes how local authorities deal with the phenomenon. Based on promising approaches used by some local authorities, the research further makes recommendations on how informal settlement growth could be turned into formal urban growth, contributing towards urban development that is more socially just, economically efficient and environmentally sustainable.
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Periodicals Periodicals Namibia Scientific Society Library Periodicals Reference PER 945 Namibian Journal of Environment (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Not For Loan
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Namibia is undergoing a rapid and major transition from a rural society to a largely urban one. This transition is most visible in rapid urban growth, especially in informal settlements that accommodate poor families in shacks on the edges of towns. Namibia's urban areas now have some 140,000 informal houses, a number likely to double over the coming seven or eight years if this trend is not addressed urgently. The economic, social and environmental costs of informal growth and unplanned urban development are huge for Namibia as a country, and as a society. This article is largely based on results from recent research on informal settlements in Namibia, implemented by Development Workshop Namibia. It provides information about the growth and characteristics of informal settlements in Namibia and describes how local authorities deal with the phenomenon. Based on promising approaches used by some local authorities, the research further makes recommendations on how informal settlement growth could be turned into formal urban growth, contributing towards urban development that is more socially just, economically efficient and environmentally sustainable.

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