Informal settlements in post-communist cities: Diversity factors and patterns

In some post-communist cities, the formation of informal settlements is a phenomenon associated with the wave of urbanisation of the 1960s and 1970s. In others, the phenomenon is connected with the influx of immigrants and refugees in the 1990s. Informal settlement areas are the result of various fa...

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Main Author: Sasha Tsenkova
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Urbanistični inštitut RS 2010-01-01
Series:Urbani Izziv
Subjects:
Online Access:http://urbani-izziv.uirs.si/Portals/uizziv/papers/urbani-izziv-en-2010-21-02-001.pdf
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spelling doaj-7bf7d49fb18948929e3acab721c099df2021-10-02T08:11:13ZengUrbanistični inštitut RSUrbani Izziv0353-64831855-83992010-01-012127384Informal settlements in post-communist cities: Diversity factors and patternsSasha TsenkovaIn some post-communist cities, the formation of informal settlements is a phenomenon associated with the wave of urbanisation of the 1960s and 1970s. In others, the phenomenon is connected with the influx of immigrants and refugees in the 1990s. Informal settlement areas are the result of various factors: inadequate spatial planning, outdated and complex legislation, housing policies that do not ensure the provision of affordable housing and outdated public administration structures. Illegal construction practices in urban areas, often due to the lack of a clear system of property rights and urban poverty, have created significant challenges in many cities such as Tirana, Belgrade, Tbilisi and Bucharest. This paper presents a typology of informal settlements in post-communist cities and discusses the interrelated economic, social and environmental challenges associated with this phenomenon. Various types of informal settlements, as well as the evolution of those types, demonstrate the complexity of the problem as well as the need to develop contextually sensitive and diverse solutions. This study presents the emerging related policy responses, including legalisation and inclusion in formal urban planning, the provision of essential social services (e.g., schools and medical clinics), the construction of technical infrastructure (e.g., safe roads, public transit, water and sewage systems) and resettlement programmes as part of social housing. Although these solutions represent various aspects of the policy continuum, they also require significant political will and the financial commitment of central and local institutions to ensure effective implementation.http://urbani-izziv.uirs.si/Portals/uizziv/papers/urbani-izziv-en-2010-21-02-001.pdfpost-communist citiesinformal settlementsurban povertyhousing affordabilitypolicy responses
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Sasha Tsenkova
spellingShingle Sasha Tsenkova
Informal settlements in post-communist cities: Diversity factors and patterns
Urbani Izziv
post-communist cities
informal settlements
urban poverty
housing affordability
policy responses
author_facet Sasha Tsenkova
author_sort Sasha Tsenkova
title Informal settlements in post-communist cities: Diversity factors and patterns
title_short Informal settlements in post-communist cities: Diversity factors and patterns
title_full Informal settlements in post-communist cities: Diversity factors and patterns
title_fullStr Informal settlements in post-communist cities: Diversity factors and patterns
title_full_unstemmed Informal settlements in post-communist cities: Diversity factors and patterns
title_sort informal settlements in post-communist cities: diversity factors and patterns
publisher Urbanistični inštitut RS
series Urbani Izziv
issn 0353-6483
1855-8399
publishDate 2010-01-01
description In some post-communist cities, the formation of informal settlements is a phenomenon associated with the wave of urbanisation of the 1960s and 1970s. In others, the phenomenon is connected with the influx of immigrants and refugees in the 1990s. Informal settlement areas are the result of various factors: inadequate spatial planning, outdated and complex legislation, housing policies that do not ensure the provision of affordable housing and outdated public administration structures. Illegal construction practices in urban areas, often due to the lack of a clear system of property rights and urban poverty, have created significant challenges in many cities such as Tirana, Belgrade, Tbilisi and Bucharest. This paper presents a typology of informal settlements in post-communist cities and discusses the interrelated economic, social and environmental challenges associated with this phenomenon. Various types of informal settlements, as well as the evolution of those types, demonstrate the complexity of the problem as well as the need to develop contextually sensitive and diverse solutions. This study presents the emerging related policy responses, including legalisation and inclusion in formal urban planning, the provision of essential social services (e.g., schools and medical clinics), the construction of technical infrastructure (e.g., safe roads, public transit, water and sewage systems) and resettlement programmes as part of social housing. Although these solutions represent various aspects of the policy continuum, they also require significant political will and the financial commitment of central and local institutions to ensure effective implementation.
topic post-communist cities
informal settlements
urban poverty
housing affordability
policy responses
url http://urbani-izziv.uirs.si/Portals/uizziv/papers/urbani-izziv-en-2010-21-02-001.pdf
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