Towards Measuring the Informal City: A Societal Metabolism Approach

Summary The rapid growth of urban informal settlements, or slums, poses a particular challenge for balancing developmental and environmental goals. In South Africa, high levels of inequality, poverty, and unemployment contribute to widespread migration. The influx of migrant workers to cities, howev...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of industrial ecology 2019-06, Vol.23 (3), p.674-685
Hauptverfasser: Smit, Suzanne, Musango, Josephine K., Kovacic, Zora, Brent, Alan C.
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container_title Journal of industrial ecology
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creator Smit, Suzanne
Musango, Josephine K.
Kovacic, Zora
Brent, Alan C.
description Summary The rapid growth of urban informal settlements, or slums, poses a particular challenge for balancing developmental and environmental goals. In South Africa, high levels of inequality, poverty, and unemployment contribute to widespread migration. The influx of migrant workers to cities, however, is rarely matched with adequate housing and infrastructure, resulting in the formation and growth of urban informal settlements. Despite the persistence of the slum phenomenon, very few studies provide an in‐depth understanding of the metabolic processes that link these spaces, and informal economies, to the broader urban environment and economy. This article therefore utilized a multiscale integrated assessment of the societal and ecosystem metabolism approach to examine human activity and land use in Enkanini, an urban informal settlement in Stellenbosch, South Africa. The results highlight a number of issues to be addressed through spatial, developmental, and local economic policy, such as the need for improved transport linkages. The time‐use results show that Enkanini is a net provider of labor to the surrounding area. Further, geographical mapping indicates Enkanini as a small, but vibrant, informal economy, while being grossly underserviced in terms of water, waste, and sanitation infrastructure. Key implications are discussed in terms of the theoretical, methodological, societal, and policy impact of the study, including the need for city observatories that conduct regular data collection and analysis.
doi_str_mv 10.1111/jiec.12776
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In South Africa, high levels of inequality, poverty, and unemployment contribute to widespread migration. The influx of migrant workers to cities, however, is rarely matched with adequate housing and infrastructure, resulting in the formation and growth of urban informal settlements. Despite the persistence of the slum phenomenon, very few studies provide an in‐depth understanding of the metabolic processes that link these spaces, and informal economies, to the broader urban environment and economy. This article therefore utilized a multiscale integrated assessment of the societal and ecosystem metabolism approach to examine human activity and land use in Enkanini, an urban informal settlement in Stellenbosch, South Africa. The results highlight a number of issues to be addressed through spatial, developmental, and local economic policy, such as the need for improved transport linkages. The time‐use results show that Enkanini is a net provider of labor to the surrounding area. Further, geographical mapping indicates Enkanini as a small, but vibrant, informal economy, while being grossly underserviced in terms of water, waste, and sanitation infrastructure. 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source Wiley Online Library Journals Frontfile Complete; PAIS Index
subjects Cities
Data collection
Economic conditions
Economic policy
Economics
Ecosystem assessment
Ecosystems
Employment
Housing
Human influences
Inequality
Informal economy
informal settlement
Infrastructure
Land use
Mapping
Metabolism
Migrant workers
Migration
Multiscale analysis
MuSIASEM
Observatories
Poverty
Sanitation
Slums
societal metabolism
South Africa
Transportation
Unemployment
Urban areas
Urban environments
urban metabolism
urban slum
Workers
title Towards Measuring the Informal City: A Societal Metabolism Approach
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