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DPU, UCL
    Module DA1 – Session 14


Development, environment and
   the peri-urban interface


          Julio D Dávila
     Development Planning Unit
     University College London
              J.Dávila, DPU, UCL
Some features of the peri-urban interface
          in metropolitan areas 1


A. The PUI is where urban and rural activities meet:
   •   Definition of ‘urban’, ‘rural’, ‘peri-urban’ (or ‘semi-urban’): often
       vague, shifting, subject to perceptions
   •   Implications of political and administrative definitions and changes
       in these (e.g. upgrading or degrading of townships; creation or
       abolition of metropolitan areas): fiscal and human resource;
       electoral; managerial




                               J.Dávila, DPU, UCL
Some features of the peri-urban interface
          in metropolitan areas 2

B. In environmental terms:
   •   A heterogeneous ‘mosaic’ of ‘natural’, ‘agrarian’ and ‘urban’ eco-
       systems
   •   Affected by material and energy flows demanded both by rural and
       urban systems
   •   Close relationship between socio-economic and environmental
       processes




                             J.Dávila, DPU, UCL
Some features of the peri-urban interface
          in metropolitan areas 3

C. Dynamic and socially & economically heterogeneous
   •   Often subject to rapid change (e.g. land use, population)
   •   Co-existence of groups with different and often competing
       interests, as well as different practices
   •   Constant change makes it difficult to create stable and legitimate
       long-term institutional structures




                             J.Dávila, DPU, UCL
Some features of the peri-urban interface
           in metropolitan areas 4

D. Political and institutional fragmentation or even
    vacuum
   •   Issues of definition and perception have administrative, fiscal and
       human resource implications
   •   Roles are often ill-defined or non-existent
   •   Conflict between customary and non-customary land tenure and
       water rights
   •   Private appropriation of large (and environmentally valuable)
       spaces without adequate state regulation (gated communities, golf
       courses, quarries, forests)
   •   All this requires a new conceptual and methodological framework


                              J.Dávila, DPU, UCL
Rural systems                      Rural – Urban Flows                          Urban systems
        Structural changes                                                                Functions/role

                                                       People
                                                                                          Non-agricultural
                                                                                          employment
       Socio-economic
                                                    Production                            Urban services
       structure and
       relations                                                                          Production supplies
                                                  Commodities                             Non-durable and
       Rural economy                                                                      durable goods
       (sectors)                                 Capital/income                           Markets for selling
                                                                                          rural products
       Rural production                             Information                           Processing /
       regimes                                                                            manufacturing
                                                                                          Information on
                                               Natural resources
                                                                                          employment,
                                                                                          production, prices,
                                             W aste and pollution                         welfare services

        Source: Based on Douglass, M. 1998, ‘A Regional Network Strategy for Reciprocal Rural-Urban Linkages’,
        Third W orld Planning Review, Vol. 20, No. 1, pp 1-33.

Source: Allen & Dávila (2002)
                                                          J.Dávila, DPU, UCL
Processes of change in the PUI


                         Pressures                Processes of                Problems
                                                  Change                      Loss of
                                                                              agricultural land,
                         Local                                                leading to a
                         e.g. land competition    Changes in land use         loss of livelihoods
                         for urban expansion      e.g. from agricultural to    for poor farmers
                         & agricultural           industrial or                and shortages
                         production               residential uses             in food production

                         Regional &
                         national                 Changes in the use
                         e.g. promotion of        on natural resources        Opportunities
                         decentralised            e.g. deforestation,         New sources of
                         industrialisation,       water depletion and         Employment
                         Privatisation of         pollution                   Land for low-cost
                         natural resources                                    Housing
                                                                              Better transport links
                         International            Changes in the              Improved access to
                         e.g. Falling prices of                               infrastructure and
                                                  generation of waste
                         export crops                                         social facilities
                                                  e.g. increased solid
                                                  and liquid waste




Source: Allen & Dávila (2002)
                                                   J.Dávila, DPU, UCL
Lessons from international
                                 program m es and projects

                        W ater & Sanitation Progra m mes        C FP/C ID A, U PA/F AO ,    U N C H S/U M P , SC P, L A21,
      Who?




                       U N D P/W ord Ban k, W H O ,U N IC EF     N R S P/D F ID , C AR E,   M E IP, U N D P, IC L E I L A21 &
                          U S A ID , C ID A, C AR E, O XFAM          SA V E, U N D P             M odel C o m mun ities

                                Built-up areas                   R ural V illages an d      C ity and bu ilt-up surroundings
   Conceptualisation




                                Poor inform al                    urban periphery                   Peri-U rban fring e
                                 settle ments                    R ural-urban links              Particular PU prob le ms
                               Peri-urban fring e

                             H ealth - Education               Peri-urban H orticu lture
                                Infrastructure                      PU Agriculture             U rban Env ironm enta l
                                                                     PU F orestry                  Pla nnin g and
     Themes




                                 Safety nets
                                 M icro-credit                   N atural R esources                M anage me nt




Source: Budds & Minaya (1999)
                                                                 J.Dávila, DPU, UCL
Rural-urban linkages and poverty

How is poverty conceptualised:
       Poverty is the result of a complex process of social, juridical, spatial,
       economic, and political exclusion
       Poverty cannot be reduced to income alone
       ‘The poor’ are not a homogeneous group; neither are the different
       members of the same household
       This supposes access to a diversity of livelihood assets (social, natural,
       financial, physical, human)
       Rural-urban linkages can become important in a survival strategy for the
       very poor
       This will depend on the physical location of different household
       members (which changes over time), as well as other factors such as
       gender, migrant status, political affiliation, ethnicity, religion




                                 J.Dávila, DPU, UCL
n   In the processes described above, different groups will be affected
    differently from rural-urban linkages
n   This will depend on the degree of access to factors such as proximity
    to urban centres, access to land, access to natural resources and
    participation in political processes
n   Hence, legal, political, social, spatial, environmental and economic
    policies and frameworks of intervention will play a crucial role in
    guaranteeing or blocking access to such factors




                                J.Dávila, DPU, UCL
Rural-urban and peri-urban processes of change


Land:
        The most visible dimension of urban growth
        Shifts from rural to urban use will affect some groups more than
        other (e.g. Older women in Kumasi, Ghana)
        With growth, and without a legal framework to protect them,
        landless farmers and small farmers are forced to move away
        from urban centres
        Land use conversion are facilitated by national (e.g.
        industrialization) & local (e.g. exclusion of rural dimensions in
        metropolitan or urban plans) policies




                               J.Dávila, DPU, UCL
Rural-urban and peri-urban processes of change

Natural resources:
      Peri-urban poor tend to depend more on access to natural
      resources than those who are more urban-based and those with
      higher incomes
      They therefore suffer more from degradation or loss or resources
      Peri-urban environmental services (forests, lakes) provide
      recreation to urban & peri-urban poor; when degraded, higher
      income households can afford to travel further afield to enjoy
      these
      Use of natural resources by peri-urban poor varies from one
      region to another in the world: fuel (wood) in Asia and Africa;
      forest resources in SE Asia; construction materials in Latin
      America


                             J.Dávila, DPU, UCL
Rural-urban and peri-urban processes of change

Changes in farming practices:
      With urban expansion, peri-urban farming land that is not lost to
      traditional urban uses can lose farming potential through
      pesticides & water over-extraction and extensive irrigation (eg.
      Flowers & horticulture)
      Capital-intensive practices can displace the peri-urban poor who
      lack capital for these activities (e.g. Asunción, Paraguay)
      Intensive farming carry higher health risks (pesticides)




                             J.Dávila, DPU, UCL
Rural-urban and peri-urban processes of change

 Livelihood diversification:
      As rural-urban linkages intensify through the flow of people, capital,
      goods, information, their relevance for livelihoods increases
      Temporary or permanent migration of household members (usually
      gender-differentiated) of rural households is an old mechanism to
      increase the household income and reduce vulnerability: multi-spatial
      households and enterprises
      At times of economic crisis (e.g. high unemployment among men due to
      restructuring through SAP), proximity to urban markets can benefit
      some more than others (e.g. rural women in Mali)
      An efficient transport infrastructure allows the daily commuting to urban
      centres to look for work
      Some proximity but a relative isolation can open new opportunities
      especially if there are high concentrations of labour (e.g. Tuy Valley,
      Caracas)




                                J.Dávila, DPU, UCL
The diversity of non-urban livelihoods:
                 Primary occupation of rural non-agricultural working
                       population in Northeast Brazil (%), 1996
Primary                     Extensao               Povoado/2                 Núcleo/3              Exclusive/4
occupation                  urbana/1
Mining                          1.2                     3.1                     n.d.                     2.3

Manufacturing                   16.9                    24.2                    n.d.                    34.2

Sales                           21.7                    20.3                    n.d.                    14.2

Services                        60.2                    52.4                    n.d.                    49.3

Total working                317.289                1.083.146                 23.796                6.504.428
population
Note: 21.8 % of rural workers in the Northeast region are engaged in non-agricultural primary occupations
Key (based on IBGE classification):
1. Urbanised areas within 1 km of the urban perimeter but not formally incorporated into it
2. Agglomerations in rural areas with some permanent structures
3. Isolated rural agglomeration with between 10 and 51 households, usually attached to some commercial activity
4. Areas which do not meet any of the criteria definingJ.Dávila, DPU, UCL
                                                        an agglomeration
Source: Ferreira & Lanjouw (2001)
Rural-urban and peri-urban processes of change

Access to services and urban waste:
      Urban expansion & infrastructure improvements can facilitate
      access to basic services for rural and peri-urban groups (health,
      education)
      Child mortality & morbidity tend to be lower in urban & peri-urban
      areas, partly due to better access to services, and partly
      because urban food tends to be more diverse and rich in energy
      and micro-nutrients
      For many peri-urban poor, access to solid and liquid waste is an
      important source of income and fertilisers




                             J.Dávila, DPU, UCL
Rural-urban and peri-urban processes of change

Access to information and power:
      Access to political power and information on prices, legal rights,
      livelihood opportunities and so on, tend to be better represented
      in urban than in rural or peri-urban areas
      The intensity in flows of people, goods and information
      contributes to increase knowledge horizons to isolated
      populations, thus improving chances of increasing incomes and
      livelihood options




                              J.Dávila, DPU, UCL
Much of DPU’s peri-urban interface work
is downloadable: www.ucl.ac.uk/dpu/pui




               J.Dávila, DPU, UCL
Additional bibliography

Brook, R, Purushothaman, S and Hunshal, C, 2001, Changing frontiers. The Peri-urban interface, Hubli-
Dharwad, India, Books for Change, Bangalore, India.

Budds, J and Minaya, A, 1999, “Overview of initiatives regarding the management of the peri-Urban
interface”, Development Planning Unit, UCL.

Ferreira, F and Lanjouw, P, 2001, “Rural Nonfarm Activities and Poverty in the Brazilian Northeast”, World
Development, Vol. 29, No. 3, pp. 509-528.

Tacoli, C, 1999, “Understanding the opportunities and constraints for low-income groups in the peri-urban
interface: the contribution of livelihood frameworks”, Development Planning Unit, UCL.

Wiggins, S and Holt, G, 2000, “Literature review: Poverty, urban poverty and forest and tree goods and
services”, Report to Forestry Research Programme: Researchable constraints to the use of forest and tree
resources by poor urban and peri-urban households in developing countries, University of Reading.




                                             J.Dávila, DPU, UCL

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DPU-UCL Lecture Dev Env & Pui

  • 1. DPU, UCL Module DA1 – Session 14 Development, environment and the peri-urban interface Julio D Dávila Development Planning Unit University College London J.Dávila, DPU, UCL
  • 2. Some features of the peri-urban interface in metropolitan areas 1 A. The PUI is where urban and rural activities meet: • Definition of ‘urban’, ‘rural’, ‘peri-urban’ (or ‘semi-urban’): often vague, shifting, subject to perceptions • Implications of political and administrative definitions and changes in these (e.g. upgrading or degrading of townships; creation or abolition of metropolitan areas): fiscal and human resource; electoral; managerial J.Dávila, DPU, UCL
  • 3. Some features of the peri-urban interface in metropolitan areas 2 B. In environmental terms: • A heterogeneous ‘mosaic’ of ‘natural’, ‘agrarian’ and ‘urban’ eco- systems • Affected by material and energy flows demanded both by rural and urban systems • Close relationship between socio-economic and environmental processes J.Dávila, DPU, UCL
  • 4. Some features of the peri-urban interface in metropolitan areas 3 C. Dynamic and socially & economically heterogeneous • Often subject to rapid change (e.g. land use, population) • Co-existence of groups with different and often competing interests, as well as different practices • Constant change makes it difficult to create stable and legitimate long-term institutional structures J.Dávila, DPU, UCL
  • 5. Some features of the peri-urban interface in metropolitan areas 4 D. Political and institutional fragmentation or even vacuum • Issues of definition and perception have administrative, fiscal and human resource implications • Roles are often ill-defined or non-existent • Conflict between customary and non-customary land tenure and water rights • Private appropriation of large (and environmentally valuable) spaces without adequate state regulation (gated communities, golf courses, quarries, forests) • All this requires a new conceptual and methodological framework J.Dávila, DPU, UCL
  • 6. Rural systems Rural – Urban Flows Urban systems Structural changes Functions/role People Non-agricultural employment Socio-economic Production Urban services structure and relations Production supplies Commodities Non-durable and Rural economy durable goods (sectors) Capital/income Markets for selling rural products Rural production Information Processing / regimes manufacturing Information on Natural resources employment, production, prices, W aste and pollution welfare services Source: Based on Douglass, M. 1998, ‘A Regional Network Strategy for Reciprocal Rural-Urban Linkages’, Third W orld Planning Review, Vol. 20, No. 1, pp 1-33. Source: Allen & Dávila (2002) J.Dávila, DPU, UCL
  • 7. Processes of change in the PUI Pressures Processes of Problems Change Loss of agricultural land, Local leading to a e.g. land competition Changes in land use loss of livelihoods for urban expansion e.g. from agricultural to for poor farmers & agricultural industrial or and shortages production residential uses in food production Regional & national Changes in the use e.g. promotion of on natural resources Opportunities decentralised e.g. deforestation, New sources of industrialisation, water depletion and Employment Privatisation of pollution Land for low-cost natural resources Housing Better transport links International Changes in the Improved access to e.g. Falling prices of infrastructure and generation of waste export crops social facilities e.g. increased solid and liquid waste Source: Allen & Dávila (2002) J.Dávila, DPU, UCL
  • 8. Lessons from international program m es and projects W ater & Sanitation Progra m mes C FP/C ID A, U PA/F AO , U N C H S/U M P , SC P, L A21, Who? U N D P/W ord Ban k, W H O ,U N IC EF N R S P/D F ID , C AR E, M E IP, U N D P, IC L E I L A21 & U S A ID , C ID A, C AR E, O XFAM SA V E, U N D P M odel C o m mun ities Built-up areas R ural V illages an d C ity and bu ilt-up surroundings Conceptualisation Poor inform al urban periphery Peri-U rban fring e settle ments R ural-urban links Particular PU prob le ms Peri-urban fring e H ealth - Education Peri-urban H orticu lture Infrastructure PU Agriculture U rban Env ironm enta l PU F orestry Pla nnin g and Themes Safety nets M icro-credit N atural R esources M anage me nt Source: Budds & Minaya (1999) J.Dávila, DPU, UCL
  • 9. Rural-urban linkages and poverty How is poverty conceptualised: Poverty is the result of a complex process of social, juridical, spatial, economic, and political exclusion Poverty cannot be reduced to income alone ‘The poor’ are not a homogeneous group; neither are the different members of the same household This supposes access to a diversity of livelihood assets (social, natural, financial, physical, human) Rural-urban linkages can become important in a survival strategy for the very poor This will depend on the physical location of different household members (which changes over time), as well as other factors such as gender, migrant status, political affiliation, ethnicity, religion J.Dávila, DPU, UCL
  • 10. n In the processes described above, different groups will be affected differently from rural-urban linkages n This will depend on the degree of access to factors such as proximity to urban centres, access to land, access to natural resources and participation in political processes n Hence, legal, political, social, spatial, environmental and economic policies and frameworks of intervention will play a crucial role in guaranteeing or blocking access to such factors J.Dávila, DPU, UCL
  • 11. Rural-urban and peri-urban processes of change Land: The most visible dimension of urban growth Shifts from rural to urban use will affect some groups more than other (e.g. Older women in Kumasi, Ghana) With growth, and without a legal framework to protect them, landless farmers and small farmers are forced to move away from urban centres Land use conversion are facilitated by national (e.g. industrialization) & local (e.g. exclusion of rural dimensions in metropolitan or urban plans) policies J.Dávila, DPU, UCL
  • 12. Rural-urban and peri-urban processes of change Natural resources: Peri-urban poor tend to depend more on access to natural resources than those who are more urban-based and those with higher incomes They therefore suffer more from degradation or loss or resources Peri-urban environmental services (forests, lakes) provide recreation to urban & peri-urban poor; when degraded, higher income households can afford to travel further afield to enjoy these Use of natural resources by peri-urban poor varies from one region to another in the world: fuel (wood) in Asia and Africa; forest resources in SE Asia; construction materials in Latin America J.Dávila, DPU, UCL
  • 13. Rural-urban and peri-urban processes of change Changes in farming practices: With urban expansion, peri-urban farming land that is not lost to traditional urban uses can lose farming potential through pesticides & water over-extraction and extensive irrigation (eg. Flowers & horticulture) Capital-intensive practices can displace the peri-urban poor who lack capital for these activities (e.g. Asunción, Paraguay) Intensive farming carry higher health risks (pesticides) J.Dávila, DPU, UCL
  • 14. Rural-urban and peri-urban processes of change Livelihood diversification: As rural-urban linkages intensify through the flow of people, capital, goods, information, their relevance for livelihoods increases Temporary or permanent migration of household members (usually gender-differentiated) of rural households is an old mechanism to increase the household income and reduce vulnerability: multi-spatial households and enterprises At times of economic crisis (e.g. high unemployment among men due to restructuring through SAP), proximity to urban markets can benefit some more than others (e.g. rural women in Mali) An efficient transport infrastructure allows the daily commuting to urban centres to look for work Some proximity but a relative isolation can open new opportunities especially if there are high concentrations of labour (e.g. Tuy Valley, Caracas) J.Dávila, DPU, UCL
  • 15. The diversity of non-urban livelihoods: Primary occupation of rural non-agricultural working population in Northeast Brazil (%), 1996 Primary Extensao Povoado/2 Núcleo/3 Exclusive/4 occupation urbana/1 Mining 1.2 3.1 n.d. 2.3 Manufacturing 16.9 24.2 n.d. 34.2 Sales 21.7 20.3 n.d. 14.2 Services 60.2 52.4 n.d. 49.3 Total working 317.289 1.083.146 23.796 6.504.428 population Note: 21.8 % of rural workers in the Northeast region are engaged in non-agricultural primary occupations Key (based on IBGE classification): 1. Urbanised areas within 1 km of the urban perimeter but not formally incorporated into it 2. Agglomerations in rural areas with some permanent structures 3. Isolated rural agglomeration with between 10 and 51 households, usually attached to some commercial activity 4. Areas which do not meet any of the criteria definingJ.Dávila, DPU, UCL an agglomeration Source: Ferreira & Lanjouw (2001)
  • 16. Rural-urban and peri-urban processes of change Access to services and urban waste: Urban expansion & infrastructure improvements can facilitate access to basic services for rural and peri-urban groups (health, education) Child mortality & morbidity tend to be lower in urban & peri-urban areas, partly due to better access to services, and partly because urban food tends to be more diverse and rich in energy and micro-nutrients For many peri-urban poor, access to solid and liquid waste is an important source of income and fertilisers J.Dávila, DPU, UCL
  • 17. Rural-urban and peri-urban processes of change Access to information and power: Access to political power and information on prices, legal rights, livelihood opportunities and so on, tend to be better represented in urban than in rural or peri-urban areas The intensity in flows of people, goods and information contributes to increase knowledge horizons to isolated populations, thus improving chances of increasing incomes and livelihood options J.Dávila, DPU, UCL
  • 18. Much of DPU’s peri-urban interface work is downloadable: www.ucl.ac.uk/dpu/pui J.Dávila, DPU, UCL
  • 19. Additional bibliography Brook, R, Purushothaman, S and Hunshal, C, 2001, Changing frontiers. The Peri-urban interface, Hubli- Dharwad, India, Books for Change, Bangalore, India. Budds, J and Minaya, A, 1999, “Overview of initiatives regarding the management of the peri-Urban interface”, Development Planning Unit, UCL. Ferreira, F and Lanjouw, P, 2001, “Rural Nonfarm Activities and Poverty in the Brazilian Northeast”, World Development, Vol. 29, No. 3, pp. 509-528. Tacoli, C, 1999, “Understanding the opportunities and constraints for low-income groups in the peri-urban interface: the contribution of livelihood frameworks”, Development Planning Unit, UCL. Wiggins, S and Holt, G, 2000, “Literature review: Poverty, urban poverty and forest and tree goods and services”, Report to Forestry Research Programme: Researchable constraints to the use of forest and tree resources by poor urban and peri-urban households in developing countries, University of Reading. J.Dávila, DPU, UCL