Advisory Center for Affordable Settlements & Housing

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Document Type General
Publish Date
Author Hulya Dagdeviren & Simon A. Robertson
Published By University of Hertfordshire Business School
Edited By Sayef Hussain
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Access to Water in The Slums of The Developing World

Access to Water in The Slums of The Developing World

Study of access to water in the slums of the developing world

According to the United Nations Human Settlements Programme (UN-Habitat), 924 million people lived in slums in 2001.

Access to water in slums
Access to water in slums

Population growth in these settlements is much greater than in other urban areas. The estimates suggest that this figure may rise to 1.5 billion by 2020 (Payne, 2005).

This rapid increase is expected despite “slum upgrading” efforts that have been taking place for decades, though inconsistently and with disruptions over time.

There is a prolific literature on informal settlement areas, but research on access to essential services such as water and sanitation (WS) in these areas is very limited. Most studies consider issues of access in connection to urban poverty, an approach that often reduces the discussion to the income and expenditure constraints faced by households.

Examining access to WS in the slums spurs an appreciation of the multidimensional nature of the problem, including income poverty, infrastructural limitations, asset ownership and housing quality. Moreover, developments in the slums concern every aspect of the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs).

This paper examines the conditions of access to water in the slums of the developing world. It has three goals. The first is to identify the objective and policy-related challenges that hinder progress in the provision of safe, affordable, continuous and easy access to water in countries where there is a sizeable slum population.

The second is to explore the existing systems of provision in informal settlements and to discuss the weaknesses and strengths of each. The third is to make policy recommendations. Though the discussion on access to sanitation is limited, this is not to deny the importance of that issue. Besides, water and sanitation services are often intrinsically linked and therefore are provided together by network utilities.

The discussion reveals the failure of public policies as well as markets to provide satisfactory solutions to the problems of access to a safe, affordable and continuous water supply. In many countries, especially those in Sub-Saharan Africa, access to safe water through household connections declined in the 1990s.

Achievements in access rates in many Asian and African economies are the due to widespread use of public water points such as public standpipes and kiosks. These sources are important, but doubtless, the quality of access to water with these facilities is unsatisfactory since they involve greater effort by households, queuing, carrying water and lacking continuous access.

A substantial proportion of urban dwellers in developing countries, especially in unplanned settlements, rely on a wide range of small-scale providers whose services are vital in the absence of alternatives.

Their services, however, are often inferior to those provided by the formal network. Invariably, the water charges of alternative sources are higher than those for supply from the public network. Section 2 of the book provides a general discussion of informal settlements and outlines the growth of slum development and trends in access to water supply since 1990.

Section 3 examines changing public policies towards squatter settlements and the challenges such settlements pose. Section 4 presents the problems associated with the existing market-based water supply arrangements in countries where a sizeable proportion of the urban population resides in informal settlement areas. We then argue for the need to pursue a more proactive public policy based on a discussion that highlights the limitations of private sector ventures. The paper concludes with several policy recommendations.

The word “slum” has been controversial and some researchers have avoided it because it carries highly negative connotations of slum-dwellers with its emphasis on social disorder, crime, filth and so on.

Other terms, such as informal settlement or peri-urban areas, are more neutral in their meaning, though they may understate or otherwise belie the real living conditions in slums that need to be the subject of public policy.

In this paper, we use the word “slum” interchangeably with other terms such as unplanned, informal, peri-urban and squatter settlements. What constitutes a slum differs from one country to another.

In Bangladesh, for example, a slum is composed of “a cluster of compact settlements of five or more households that generally grow very unsystematically and haphazardly in an unhealthy condition and atmosphere on government and private vacant land” (Hanchett et al., 2003: 44).

In contrast to this broad and vague definition, the Brazilian Demographic Census, for instance, considers a slum to be composed of one or more adjacent subnormal clusters containing a set of at least 51 housing units (maximum, 350) occupying or having occupied until recently lots that were not owned by the dwellers, generally arranged in an unordered and dense manner and mostly lacking in basic public services (IBGE, 2000: 229).

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