Shantytowns (also called slums, squatter settlements camps, favelas), are settlements (sometimes illegal or unauthorized) of impoverished people who live in improvised dwellings made from scrap materials—often plywood, corrugated metal, and sheets of plastic. Shanty towns, which are usually built on the periphery of cities, often do not have proper sanitation, electricity, or telephone services.
Shanty towns are mostly found in developing nations, or partially developed nations with an unequal distribution of wealth (or, on occasion, developed countries in a severe recession). In extreme cases, shanty towns have populations approaching that of a city. One billion people, one-sixth of the world's population, now live in shanty towns. [1]
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SHANTYTOWN TICKETS
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Origins
right,
India.
Shanty towns tend to develop on the outskirts of cities. During the
Great Depression of the 1930s, shanty towns, often called "Hobo jungles," "
favelas," or "Georgie Slums" appeared in cities across
North America because of massive
unemployment. In the
United States they were sometimes nicknamed "
Hoovervilles" because the residents blamed the economic conditions on then President
Herbert Hoover, whose decisions were popularly thought to have caused the
depression. Similarly in
Canada, hobo jungles were dubbed "Bennettville" after
Prime Minister Bennett.
The first recorded use of the word
shanty
, as meaning a crude dwelling, was in
Ohio in 1820. It may have been derived from the
French Canadian word
chantier
, meaning hut in a lumber camp, from the French word for timberyard. Alternatively, it could have been derived from the
Irish seán tí
{shaun tee], meaning "old house" or from the
Nahuatl word chantli "home".
Dangers
Since construction is informal and unguided by urban planning, there is a near total absence of formal
street grids, numbered streets, sanitation networks,
electricity, or
telephones. Even if these resources are present, they are likely to be disorganized, old or inferior. Shanty towns also tend to lack basic services present in more formally organized settlements, including policing, medical services, and fire fighting. Fires are a particular danger for shanty towns because of the close proximity of buildings and flammability of materials used in construction.
[2] A sweeping fire on the hills of
Shek Kip Mei, Hong Kong, in late 1953 left 53,000 squatter dwellers homeless, prompting the colonial government to institute a resettlement estate system.
Stereotypes present shanty towns as inevitably having high rates of
crime,
suicide,
drug use, and
disease. However the observer
Georg Gerster has noted (with specific reference to the
invasões
of
Brasilia), "squatter settlements [as opposed to slums], despite their unattractive building materials, may also be places of hope, scenes of a counter-culture, with an encouraging potential for change and a strong upward impetus."
[3]
Examples
thumb 2007
Shanty towns are present in a number of countries. The largest shanty town in the world is the Neza-Chalco region in the
state of Mexico,
Mexico. The largest shanty town in
Asia is the Orangi Township in
Karachi,
Pakistan,
[4] [5] while the largest in
Africa is
Kibera in
Nairobi,
Kenya.
[6] Another large shanty town is
Dharavi in
Mumbai,
India which houses over 1 million people.
[
]
Other countries with shanty towns include South Africa (where they are often called squatter camps
) or imijondolo, Australia (mainly in Aboriginal areas), the United States, the Philippines (often called squatter areas
), Venezuela (where they are known as barrios), Brazil (favelas), West Indies such as Jamaica and Trinidad and Tobago (where they are known as Shanty town), Peru (where they are known as pueblos jóvenes), and Haiti, where they are referred to as bidonvilles
. There are also shanty town population in countries such as Bangladesh [7] and the People's Republic of China. [8] [9] [10] In many countries there are now large movements of shanty town residents which often face severe state repression.
For example in South Africa Abahlali baseMjondolo have become a significant political force in the cities of Durban and Pietermaritzburg and in Brazil the Movement of Workers Without a Roof (MST) is very strong.
thumb, South Africa
Many countries have a name for marginal settlements.
- Villas de emergencia
or villas miseria
in Argentina
- Barrio
or barriada
in Puerto Rico
- Champerios
or tugurios
in El Salvador
- Asentamientos
(settlements) in Guatemala
- Barrios de chabolas
in Spain
- Bairro de Lata
in Portugal
- Barrio Malo
in Dominican Republic
- Bidonvilles
in French-speaking countries
- Bustee
in Hindi(India)
- Cantegriles
in Uruguay
- Ciudades perdidas
(lost cities) or Jacales
in Mexico
- Colonias
or Migrant camp
along the Mexico – United States border
- El Ghetto
in Panama
- Favelas
in Brazil
- Gecekondu
in Turkey
- Hoovervilles
in the United States
- Invasión
(invasion) in Honduras
- Invasión
in Mexico
- Invasiones
(invasions) in Colombia and Ecuador
- Jhugi/Bustee/Zhopdi/Zhopadpatti/Jhopadpatti
in (Hindi and Marathi) India
- Kachi Abadi
in Pakistan
- Kartonsko naselje
(cardboard settlement) in Serbia
- Karyan
in Morocco
- Katavlismos
(campaments, referring to Roma settlements) in Greece
- Khoshash
in the Middle East
- Khu o chuot
(rat hole neigborhood) in Vietnam
- Kijiji
in Kenya
- Korogocho
(Kenya) see
- Kuppam
in Tamil Nadu (India) - Kuppam is also a town in Andhra Pradesh, India
- Lušnynai
in Lithuania
- Mudduku
in Sri Lanka
- Poblaciones Callampas
(mushroom settlements), Poblas
or Campamentos
in Chile
- Precario
or tugurio
in Costa Rica
- Pueblos jóvenes
(young towns) or barriadas
in Peru
- Putri
in Hungary
- Ranchos
or barrios
in Venezuela
- Setinggan
or Rumah Kongsi
in Malaysia (A local movie changed its name to 'Sting Garden', to the plot that a poor girl living in setinggans trying to attract a wealthy boy's heart)
- Squatter camps
or imijondolo
in South Africa
- Tugurios
in Colombia
- Villa
in Paraguay
- G'raba
in Algeria
See also - variations of impoverished settlements
- Barrio(informal)
- Colonia (border settlement) Mexico
- Dharavi (India)
- Favela (Brazil)
- Ghetto
- Hooverville (USA 1930's)
- Kibera Kenya
- Orangi Town (Pakistan)
- Refugee shelter
- Shanty town
- Skid row
- Squatting
- Tent city
- Trailer park (USA)
- Urban decay
See also - people, organizations and other related articles
- Abahlali baseMjondolo
- Flophouse
- Hernando de Soto (economist)
- Hobo
- Mike Davis (scholar)
- New Village China
- Slum upgrading
- Slumdog Millionaire (film)
- Slum Dwellers International
- Slumlord
- United Nations Human Settlements Programme
- Western Cape Anti-Eviction Campaign
References
- http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/science/nature/4561183.stm downloaded 19th of May 2005.
- See the report on shack fires in South Africa by Matt Birkinshaw [1] as well as the wider collection of articles in fires in shanty towns at [1]
- Georg Gerster, ''Flights of Discovery: The Earth from Above'', 1978, London: Paddington, p. 116
- Dharavi - National Geographic Magazine
- http://www.dawn.com/weekly/cowas/20071006.htm
- http://www.imcworldwide.org/content/article/detail/766/
- http://www.isuh.org/download/dhaka.pdf
- http://olympics.scmp.com/Article.aspx?id=1419§ion=insight
- http://english.peopledaily.com.cn/200509/09/eng20050909_207472.html
- http://www.isg-fi.org.uk/spip.php?article288