Making the Invisible Visible: Generating Data on ‘Slums’ at Local, City and Global scales

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Author(s)
Beukes, A.
Publication language
English
Pages
24pp
Date published
01 Dec 2015
Type
Research, reports and studies
Keywords
Poverty, Targeting, Identification and Profiling, Urban
Organisations
IIED DFID Urban Crises Learning Fund

The largest and most detailed set of data about what are termed ‘slums’ or ‘informal settlements’ has been built from enumerations undertaken by the residents of these settlements and their federations. These include settlement profiles, house-by-house surveys and mapping. This has been encouraged and supported by Shack/Slum Dwellers International – to which these federations and their support NGOs are affiliated.

This paper describes how this data set was built and how it is being developed – and the challenges of keeping the process owned by communities but also with the outputs useful for others, including local governments. Doing these settlement enumerations (profiles, surveys and maps) helps mobilise communities and also serves to help them identify collectively the deficits in conditions. Undertaking these enumerations helps produce a sense of belonging to place and space that has powerful bearing in the taking of ownership for its development. They also serve as instruments for advocacy and for opening dialogue with city authority, national and international development partners around slum upgrading and planning.

All the federations that are members of Slum/Shack Dwellers International have agreed to use a common template for settlement profiles. This provides a strong basis through which to compare and contrast different settlements and to aggregate to get city-level statistics. This also contributes to a much more detailed understanding of the scale of informal settlements internationally. This paper also describes the social and technical complexities that the network has had to address in achieving a single, globally accessible data platform for its ‘slum’ data.