Urbanisation in LEDC
Life in Nairobi for the PoorKibera – Africa’s Biggest Slum
Why?
Why would people move from rural to urban areas in LEDC’s?
Push / Pull Factors
Conditions for The Poor• Many newcomers to Nairobi arrive with no ____ and
are forced to live in a squatter ______ on the _______ of the city.
• Squatter settlements are illegal towns built out of basic _________.
• They often don’t have _______, medical facilities, sewers and running ______ facilities.
WORD BANK: WATER EDGE MATERIALSSCHOOLS JOB SETTLEMENT
Kibera
Kibera is situated 7 km South West of Nairobi City Centre. With a population of over 1 million it is the largest squatter settlement in Africa. A squatter settlement is an unplanned settlement built by the inhabitants. The land Kibera is built on is owned by the government meaning it is illegal
Learning for Life
Kibera Fact Box• Largest slum in Kenya• 60% of the people that live in Nairobi live in slums• Between 800,000 and 1 million people live in
Kibera• 255 ha (around the size of 255 football pitches)• Extremely high population density • 1 meter of floor space per person • There are around 100,000 orphans – this is due in
part to the AIDS epidemic in Kibera
Kibera – Africa’s Biggest slum.Imagine you are the boy in the photo.
Write 10 words to describe whatConditions are like in Kibera
• • • • • • • • • •
Videos!
• Documentary video• http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=T21nL41L
YVg• Women in Kibera• http://
www.youtube.com/watch?v=FaamPV4YDHU• Problems with sanitation• http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=chGq3Q_
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Social, Economic and Environmental problems in Kibera
Task:Draw a selection of diagrams or one large diagram featuring the problems faced in Kibera .
Learning for Life
Housing in Kibera No preparation for these houses so
– No sanitation– No piped water– No road access– No electricity (legally)
The houses are built from any available material – Corrugated iron– Card board
Learning for Life
Housing in Kibera • Paths between houses are irregular,
narrow and often have ditches running down the middle that have sewage in
• Smell = Charcoal and human waste
• One pipe may provide 40 inhabitants
• Private companies own hosepipes- they then charge double than he standard rate for water
• Individuals homes are kept very clean and residents welcome visitors
Learning for Life
Living Conditions The shanties only provide basic accommodation!• Very crowded!
• One or two rooms • Sleeping on the floor• No toilet • Little public transport• No street lighting• Crime is rife!
-Vigilante groups offer security at a high price-Police are reluctant to enter these zones
• Rubbish is not collected = disease and filth • Good community spirit
Learning for Life
Life in Kibera • Poorly paid jobs• Work/ money is unreliable• QOL is poor (due to
housing and environment)• Crime is a problem • Children do not go to
school• No privacy • Disease • Lack of money- so cant
improve their housing conditions
Most jobs are in the informal sector- that means that the jobs are not regular or reliable and people do not pay taxes! (Can a government pay to improve an area when they are getting no money from tax?)
Social, Economic and Environmental ProblemsSocial Economic Environmental
Population density is high Jobs are mainly in the informal sector ie. Jobs are illegal, and low paid
No safe rubbish disposal so rubbish is dumped and can contaminate water supplies
Housing provision – mainly built from poor quality materials ie corrugated iron roofs, mud, bricks
Unskilled and low paid workers who may be stuck living in Kibera
Sanitation runs into streams and rivers which are used for drinking
Small houses which accommodate 6+ people
Residents tap into electricity supplies to gain free electricity – unsafe and costly to supplier
No clean safe water supply so waterborne diseases eg. cholera and typhoid are common, leading to a low life expectancy
No healthcare, sanitation, education provision
Pollution is high due to the amount of rubbish that is dumped by inhabitants
High crime and rape rates – unsafe for women at night
Learning for Life
Solutions? Low cost flats! • 770 families rehoused! • Inhabitants used involved in the
planning• Running water , toilets, electricity • Small, but bigger than the shanties! • Less crime• Gives people pride in themselves
and their community Funded by the govt, charities and private loans!
Make peoples homes permanent!People have no right to the land that their shanty is built on- the government can come at any time and move them on- so people do not see the point in spending time and effort in improving their shanties! If people knew that their shanties were permanent they would be worth investing in!
Learning for Life
Self Help Schemes – Kibera • A charity has developed low-cost roofing tiles made from
sand and clay • Two main water pipes have been provided -one paid for by
Kenyan govt- other by The World Bank. (improving sanitation will be much much harder!
• Medical facilities are provided by charities (training local people)
• Gap- year students encouraged
• Small scale businesses to help earn money– Money generated put back in to local economy
Sites and Services Scheme
• Shanty town dwellers had to put their name down to go on the scheme
• If chosen they agreed to go to evening classes at a college to learn construction skills
• If they passed the exams they were given rented a small plot of land connected to running water sewerage and electricity
• • On this site the family can then build a house with building materials they are given.
Comparing high class and squatter residential areas
Squatter SettlementsPopulation structure:Adults aged 21 – 30 account for 15% of the population of squatter settlements. This may be because young people have migrated to Nairobi from rural areas due to push/pull factors such as… . However, when they arrive, they struggle to find jobs, particularly if they are unskilled and have a low level of education, and so remain in squatter settlements
TASK: Look at the graph above and answer the following questions:1) What is meant by urbanisation? (1 mark)
2) Identify the sub-regions with an urbanization growth rate over 3% (2 marks)
3) Use evidence from the graph to suggest why LEDCs have a higher urbanization growth than MEDCs (2 marks)
Exam Questions
• Explain one pressure resulting from a rising demand for urban living spaces. (2)
• Explain why many people in rural areas of the developing world wish to migrate to urban areas. (2)
• Explain why the population of some inner city areas has risen in recent years. (3)