The Rise Of Urban Poverty
India is going from being a predominantly rural country, to one where the majority of its people live in cities and by 2030, 600 million people are expected to reside in urban areas, a rise from 377 million people in 2011. Whilst urban centres present real opportunities for migrating poor rural people, they also create and feed the conditions within which poverty spreads.
Urbanisation
The rapid pace of urbanisation is currently outstripping the capacity of our governments to cope with it, - resulting in inadequate housing, basic infrastructure and services.
Urbanisation
The rapid pace of urbanisation is currently outstripping the capacity of our governments to cope with it, - resulting in inadequate housing, basic infrastructure and services.
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India's current urban population will grow to 814 million by 2050
( Data Source -UN World Urbanization Prospects 2018)
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By 2030, Mumbai will have an estimated population of 28 million
(Data Source - UN World Urbanization Prospects 2018)
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million households in indian slums
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The percentage of people living in slums is estimated to be as high as 41.3% in Mumbai
(UN World Urbanization Prospects 2018)
Needs of the Urban Poor
Needs of the Urban Poor
What Urban Poverty Looks Like
Multidimensional
Urban poverty impacts all areas of life.
Deprivation
of food, safe water, sanitation and shelter insecurity of livelihoods
Vulnerability
that generates an everyday struggle to survive.
Intergenerational Cycle
a vicious, intergenerational cycle of poverty.
What Urban Poverty Looks Like
Multidimensional
Urban poverty impacts all areas of life.
Deprivation
of food, safe water, sanitation and shelter insecurity of livelihoods
Vulnerability
that generates an everyday struggle to survive.
Intergenerational Cycle
a vicious, intergenerational cycle of poverty.