Perspectives

November 17, 2008
Filipino slums expand as population explodes

Slums in Manila, Philippines.

The United Nations predicts that 2 billion people worldwide will live in slums by 2030 — largely in Asia and Africa. Exacerbated by population growth and declining resources, Asia is currently home to over half of the global slum population (581 million people).

Chris Pablo is an operations officer in the World Bank infrastructure team in Manila — where the population has soared — and writes in the “East Asia & Pacific on the Rise” blog about helping to deal with slums. In the Philippines, about 20 million people live in slums.

Empowering the poor: Helping urban slums to help themselves

In a country where half of the population lives in urban areas, one would expect colonies of slums (arguably called “informal settlements”) strewn across almost every town with high population densities. The picture is not a far cry from reality, at least in the context of the Philippines, perhaps the fastest urbanizing country in Asia. But even if the country has seen incredible growth over the years, there is hope things can turn around — and the feeling is not baseless.

I started working on slum upgrading five years ago in several cities across the major island groups of the Philippines. The challenges may differ from one village to another, but seldom do I get the feeling of hopelessness in the slum communities. Most know the root of the problem — lack of the skills and education needed for gainful employment. They strive to bring their kids to school to address a long-term solution to the problem of poverty. For now, though, near-term solutions are necessary to alleviate poor living conditions of the urban poor.

The poor need to be empowered, and solutions have to be designed by them. And they do participate. Community organization, a difficult yet key element to successful slum upgrading, is often successfully carried out, with communities taking mostly the lead. In places where there is collective sense of purpose and willingness to be helped, the likelihood of successful community upgrading is greater. Several places where successful slum upgrading projects have been introduced are indeed anchored on programs of strong community organizing.

Dealing with slums has often been regarded as controversial, making local leaders reluctant to do much. Still, more and more city mayors are seriously implementing community upgrading programs. The city of Marikina in metro Manila has committed to making the city slum free by 2010, and it is close to achieving this objective. Naga city is carrying out a long-term housing program that is built around community-based mortgage scheme. The coastal city of San Fernando, La Union, continues to move villages in high-risk areas to resettlements with better services.

To read more, see the original post.

Photo courtesy of Flickr user KarlMarx under a Creative Commons license.

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Comments

3 comments

#3

It might help if the poor had acess to free birth control and family planning. Those in charge deem it as sacreligious and recently put an end to it. How awful. Population growth is through the roof and the highest in Asia.

#2

Easier said than done, Luis.

NGOs like the Kababaihan Gabay ng Bayan has taken the strategy of setting up in urban resettlement sites, early childhood care and development (ECCD) learning centers as an entry point to organizing women (mothers)into mothers’ classes for training in livelihood and good citizenship. Our experience tells us that key to any successfull engagement is the breaking of the mindset of powerlessness and its attendant culture of disorder.
Currently, we are servicing 7 resettlement sites, providing free education and supplemental feeding to over 500 children in these seven sites. Incidentally, a number of our donors include friends of the President. :)

After initial organizing work, our women members have discovered for themselves the pleasures of incremental improvement in their homes, recycling the waste they see around into things that they use to beautify their homes and create order out of what was previously a disorderly, unkempt community. This kicks off their sense of pride in themselves, and starts off the sharing of ideas on how to improve themselves more, preparing them psychologically for the discipline of entrepreneurship.
all throughout this process, we at KAGABAY also continue teaching young children the value of education, inculcating the love for reading and knowledge, until even the children themselves become catalysts for demanding change in their own families and homes.
Eventually, under our Women in Grassroot Governance program, we look forward to strengthening the capacities of our “mothers” in mobilizing their communities, leading to their participation in good governance and village administration. In the next elections(2010), we hope to have developed a new breed of mother-leaders that will take on the reins of leadership in their own villages, to advance aa development agenda that is focused on evidence-based, participative planning, and driven by participatory, inclusive, nurturing and pro-active type of “motherly” leadership. :)

#1

The present situation of the Philippine slum can be deminished by having those in power to cut their corruptions and focus in helping the poor stricken places. This would start from the President and her husband down to the very lowest rank in a barrio.

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