Housing the Poor in Asian Cities: Land

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Publication language
English
Pages
50pp
Date published
01 Jan 2008
Type
Research, reports and studies
Keywords
Urban, Shelter and housing, Land issues
Organisations
UN Habitat

Without land, there can be no housing. And without looking at the issue of land, there
can be no meaningful discussion about how to solve the problems of housing for the
poor in our cities. The inaccessibility of decent, secure, affordable land is the major
reason why there are so many slums in Asian cities and a contributing factor to urban
poverty.
This guide looks at the different forms of land tenure which operate in Asian cities and
examines some of the problems and benefits of these different land tenure systems.
The guide then looks at how land is supplied, valued, financed and sold in the formal
market, how this formal market is failing to make secure, appropriate land available to
their city’s low-income populations and why the majority of Asia’s urban poor are being
forced to obtain land for their housing through informal land markets.
It may not be possible to stop the wheels of urbanization or market forces which are
driving up the cost of urban land and making it inaccessible to most city dwellers — and
to the poor especially. But there are things that governments, community organizations
of the poor and civil society organizations that support them can do to help make more
land available for the poor both now and in the future. This guide introduces some of
the conventional and more innovative strategies being successfully used to do this.
This guide is not aimed at specialists, but aims to help build the capacities of
national and local government officials and policy makers who need to quickly
enhance their understanding of low-income housing issues.