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    A framework for redevelopment of informal settlements

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    Date
    2009
    Author
    Odeyo, William O
    Type
    Thesis
    Language
    en
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    Abstract
    Kenya like many Developing countries face high rate of urbanization with consequential effect of rapid mushrooming of low in-come neighbourhoods, which are many cases are not provided with the basic infrastructure and services. The problem of the study was that the low neighbourhood redevelopment strategies by the government have been inadequate in addressing the housing conditions of the low in-come earners and the urban poor. The study seeked to examine the broad framework for sustainable redevelopment of low in-come urban residential neighbourhoods in Kenya, with a case study of Silanga village, Kibera. This was done by employing both first and second-degree methods of data collection, which were then, analyzed using descriptive; content and statistical analyses and later on presented in form of text, photograph, and frequency tables. The study found out that Kenya’s strategies towards redevelopment of low in-come neighbourhoods have not in many instances, achieved the goal of providing decent housing to the urban poor. Noted failures include: lack of involvement of beneficiaries during policy formulation stage; demolition and evictions resulting to slum dwellers being relocated to some other parts of the city and in other instances, slum dwellers being left in “limbo” without alternative housing and land arrangements or compensation; lack of sustainable financial mechanisms; no contribution to poverty reduction or problems related to unemployment and land security. The study concluded that the major obstacles to sustainable redevelopment of low income neighbourhoods in Kenya still remains: inadequate financial mechanisms, lack of access to land, cumbersome shelter delivery systems, lack of communal finance for shelter development and maintenance, high cost of building materials, insufficient infrastructure provision, maintenance and rehabilitation mechanisms, high urbanisation rate, environmental degradation and weak institutional coordination and failure to include the private organizations as well as civil society in the redevelopment programmes. The study proposed two strategy frameworks for sustainably redeveloping low in-come residential neighbourhoods, which included Financial frameworks and policy and Legislative Reforms frameworks.
    URI
    http://erepository.uonbi.ac.ke:8080/xmlui/handle/123456789/14533
    Sponsorhip
    University of Nairobi
    Publisher
    School of the built environment Department of urban and regional planning
    Collections
    • Faculty of Engineering, Built Environment & Design (FEng / FBD) [1561]

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