SLUM UPGRADING TO RESETTLEMENT COLONIES: BUILDING INCLUSIVE, SAFE AND RESILIENT COMMUNITIES Authors: N.Joshua Jayaseelan , ALBAN NISHANTH LALU AND R.SANKARANARAYANAN
ABSTRACT
The term “slum” connotes the informal and illegal tenements marked by inhuman and abysmal
conditions of inadequate housing, overcrowding and lack of access to the bare civic necessities
of sanitation and hygiene. Governments across the world try to address the problem of slum
dwellers but they are hardly successful in their outcomes. Finding a lasting and sustainable
solution to the problems caused by rapid proliferation of slums has always been elusive.
Resettlement colonies are one of the solutions adopted by Local Governments in India to address
the issue of slums where in large number of houses are built on the fringes of the city where
cheap land is available. Moving to these resettlement colonies entail slum dwellers not only
moving farther away from, but also deprivation of access to their work places, schools, social
institutions and networks of support for their daily living. This paper examines the case of slum
dwellers forcibly evicted and housed from Appasamy Street Slum, adjoining Chetpet, a posh locality in the heart of Chennai, to a resettlement colony at Perumbakkam situated in the
periphery of the city as part of Slum upgrading. This paper tries to capture the lived experiences
of slum dwellers on moving to the resettlement colony through Focus Group Discussions and Indepth Interviews. The paper brings out that though the slum upgradation program has resulted in
a relatively better housing compared to their earlier slum settlement, it has largely failed in
addressing the livelihood needs and other basic civic amenities making them more vulnerable to
poverty than before.
Keywords: Slum, Slum Upgrading, Resettlement Colony, Urban poor
Publication date: 15/01/2022 https://ijbpas.com/pdf/2022/January/MS_IJBPAS_2022_JAN_SPCL_1066.pdfDownload PDFhttps://doi.org/10.31032/IJBPAS/2022/11.1.1066