Urban environmentsIssues in shanty towns

Developed world cities have land use zones with recognisable characteristics which have experienced change and redevelopment. Developing world cities have to deal with issues in their shanty towns.

Part ofGeographyUrban

Issues in shanty towns

Rio de Janeiro

The huge volume of people migrating to cities has caused many problems.

New arrivals to the city build their own houses out of basic materials such as tarpaulin, corrugated sheets and broken bricks, on land which they neither own nor rent.

These areas are and are not catered for by the Government, so there is no electricity, rubbish collection, schools or hospitals. The houses in these settlements have no basic amenities such as running water or toilets, so there are high incidences of diseases like cholera and dysentery.

Overcrowding is a major problem in Rio's favelas. On average, the population density is about 37,000 people per square kilometre. Because of the lack of toilets and poor , sewage often runs in open drains. This causes diseases which spread rapidly.

People are poor and cannot afford or medicines so illnesses go untreated. Diseases spread rapidly. As a result, infant mortality rates are high and life expectancy is low (on average 56 years) in a Rio favela.

There are not enough jobs to go around, so rates are high. Most people who do have a job work in the informal sector for 'cash in hand', eg labourers, selling food on street stalls or cleaners. Informal sector jobs are very poorly paid and the work is irregular so a steady income is not guaranteed.

The crime rate in the favelas is extremely high as they are controlled by gangs who are involved in organised crime. Rocinha is so feared by police that they do not patrol on foot without guns.

Rio is hemmed in by mountains, so during and are common. Make-shift houses in favelas offer little protection to people and houses are easily washed away by the heavy rain and mud.

Development issues in shanty towns

The Brazilian Government has realised that it cannot solve the housing problem in favelas of cities like Rio by destroying them. The Government wants to improve existing but does not want to encourage more to develop. The favelas are eyesores and portray a poor image of the city.

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