Climate Change and Declining Levels of Green Structures: Life in Informal Settlements of Dar es salaam, Tanzania

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dc.contributor.author Roy, Manoj
dc.contributor.author Shemdoe, Riziki
dc.contributor.author Hulme, David
dc.contributor.author Mwageni, Nicholaus
dc.contributor.author Gough, Alex
dc.date.accessioned 2023-05-23T06:51:25Z
dc.date.available 2023-05-23T06:51:25Z
dc.date.issued 2018
dc.identifier.citation Roy, M., Shemdoe, R., Hulme, D., Mwageni, N., & Gough, A. (2018). Climate change and declining levels of green structures: Life in informal settlements of Dar es Salaam, Tanzania. Landscape and Urban Planning, 180, 282-293. en_US
dc.identifier.uri http://localhost:8080/xmlui/handle/123456789/549
dc.description Full text article is available at: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.landurbplan.2017.11.011 en_US
dc.description.abstract Impacts of climate change are often acute for those who live in informal settlements, the places where poverty, inequality and deprivation are concentrated in cities across the developing world. To broaden the strategies to address this issue, many cities are now embracing ecosystem-based adaptation and resilience. But, in Sub-Saharan Africa the approach has yet to make much headway. This paper examines how climate change impacts on poor urban people via one component of urban ecosystem - urban green structures (UGS) - in Dar es Salaam, Tanzania. It examines: the UGS of importance to the city's informal dwellers and the range of derived services; changes over time to these UGS and derived services; and emerging adaptation practices. Using qualitative methods, the study has three key findings. First, cultural ecosystem services are of greatest importance to informal dwellers, although they do harness a range of other services. Second, the city's UGS have undergone dramatic changes due to both climatic and non-climatic factors. This has resulted in a gradual decline in the quantity and quality of UGS-derived services for the urban poor. Third, in responding to these changes, informal settlement dwellers have relied mostly on their personal, and sometimes on their collective, resources and capabilities. There are some innovative practices that draw on external institutions, but access to external support for informal communities has remained consistently low. City authorities should approach and plan greening 'for' (not 'in') informal settlements as a targeted environmental improvement endeavour - referred to here as 'creative urban planning'. en_US
dc.publisher Landscape and Urban Planning en_US
dc.subject Climate Change en_US
dc.subject Green Structures en_US
dc.subject Informal Settlements en_US
dc.subject Dar es salaam en_US
dc.subject Tanzania en_US
dc.title Climate Change and Declining Levels of Green Structures: Life in Informal Settlements of Dar es salaam, Tanzania en_US
dc.type Article en_US


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