Governance of Urban Green Infrastructure in Informal Settlements of Windhoek, Namibia

Facing increased rural-urban migration, population growth, climate change impacts, and cascading natural, security, and health hazards, many municipalities in sub-Saharan Africa are beginning to consider the benefits of urban green infrastructure for improving the resilience and wellbeing of residen...

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Veröffentlicht in:Sustainability 2021-08, Vol.13 (16), p.8937
Hauptverfasser: Wijesinghe, Amayaa, Thorn, Jessica P. R
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description Facing increased rural-urban migration, population growth, climate change impacts, and cascading natural, security, and health hazards, many municipalities in sub-Saharan Africa are beginning to consider the benefits of urban green infrastructure for improving the resilience and wellbeing of residents living in informal settlements. However, present governance systems are often ill-equipped to deliver the scale of planning needed. Integration of urban green infrastructure into local government mandates, spatial planning and targeted action plans remains limited, further inhibited by scarce empirical research on the topic in Africa. Taking Windhoek, Namibia, and specifically Moses ǁGaroëb, Samora Machel, and Tobias Hainyeko constituencies as a case study, we fitted key informant interview (n = 23), focus group (n = 20), and participant observation data into existing governance theory to investigate (a) benefits and trade-offs of present urban green infrastructure in Windhoek’s informal settlements; (b) urban green infrastructure governance in terms of institutional frameworks, actors and coalitions, resources, and processes; and (c) the key desirable pathways for future urban green infrastructure governance in informal settlements. To this end, we used five green infrastructure initiatives to dissect governance intricacies and found diverse opportunities for innovative governance mechanisms. The urgent need for climate resilience in Namibia offers a policy and practice window to adopt context-specific approaches for multifunctional urban green infrastructure. However, for these initiatives to succeed, collaborative governance platforms and clearly delineated mandates are necessary, with explicit integration of urban green infrastructure into strategies for in-situ informal settlements upgrading and green job growth.
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subjects Case studies
Cities
Climate change
Climate change adaptation
Comparative analysis
Drought
Ecosystems
Environmental aspects
Food
Green infrastructure
Health hazards
Infrastructure
Integration
Local government
Low income groups
Municipalities
Planning
Population growth
Resilience
Rural urban migration
Sanitation
Security
Social aspects
Squatters
Surveys
Sustainability
Urban areas
title Governance of Urban Green Infrastructure in Informal Settlements of Windhoek, Namibia
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