why is most of future growth of cities likely to be in the developing world?
Natural Increase : birth rate
is higher than death rate
Rural to urban migration : people
moving from countryside to cities.
megacities
DEFINITIONS
Megacity: a city with
other 10 million people
conurbation: when 2 or more cities
merge together
World city : cities which have
political and economical importance
primate city : largest city in a
country or region
Urban primacy : urban areas
with global importance and
influence which is greater than
their size
informal sector
Informal Sector :
unofficial economy.
People don't have
contracts or
employment right.
MUMBAI
INTRODUCTION
Near the arabian
sea for trade
easily
accessable
from different
areas in India
Mumbai's site attracted the first
people to live here becoming an
issue because it is difficult to
expand due to the Arabian sea
Mumbai's connectivity has fuelled the growth of its
economy and population because the railway connects
parts of Mumbai together and is easy for the population
to move to Mumbai. The railway has also helped
commuters to travel in and out the city each day. The
port has also helped Mumbai to help with trade.
mumbai is a
megacity and a
world city
Natural increase and rural to
urban migration has caused
mumbai to grow rapidly.
migrants are usually young
(20-30 years) looking for work.
They usually stay in Mumbai
and once married start families.
Mumbai's natural increase has
increased 1.4% per year.
rural areas have few jobs other than
agricultural. new farming techniques
also mean fewer farmers are
required. factors like these help to
'push' them away towards Mumbai.
WHY WOULD PEOPLE MOVE TO MUMBAI?
Job opportunites
high expectations
better connected
closer/better health care
better education - 95% literacy rate -
8% higher than average
WHY DOES QUALITY OF
LIFE VARY IN THE
SLUMS? DHARAVI
OPPORTUNITES
85% employment rate
recycling - (80%) of plastic
'rag pickers' are needed to collect this plastic
which gives jobs and more employment to
people. They sell the rubbish to dealers for 2p
each
some opportunities for wealth
CHALLENGES
unhygienic
embarassment
diseases and illnesses
lots of hours - informal work
low pay
children have to work
CHALLENGES CAUSES BY POPULATION GROWTH
not much available space in education
human waste
pollution
housing is low
competition for houses
unaffordable housing
re-development
living enviroments
employment is low
people moving to informal work
healthcare is low
STRATEGIES FOR IMPROVING QUALITY OF LIFE
TOP-DOWN STRATEGY
big, expensive infrastructure
projects managed and imposed by
goverment.
BOTTOM-UP STRATEGY
opposite to top-down strategy. non governmental
organisations (NGO's) work with local residents to come up
with community based solutions to quality of life challenges.