Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/1942/40588
Title: Examining the Intricacies and Perpetual Issues in Urban Informal Settlements: Lessons from Two Case Studies of Informal Settlements in Lahore, Pakistan
Authors: Arif, Muhammad Mashhood
DEVISCH, Oswald 
Schoonjans, Yves
Issue Date: 2023
Source: Journal of Art, Architecture and Built Environment (JAABE), 6 (1) , p. 62 -93
Abstract: Informal settlements have become a central part of urban imagery. It is a self-organized form of urbanization that expands beyond the reach of the state and encroaches upon, infiltrates, and inundates cities in the Global South. The forms of urban informality develop and offer a means of habitation for the urban poor, characterized by a lack of basic services, overcrowding, economic vulnerability, and an unhygienic urban environment. In Lahore, a metropolitan area with more than 11 million residents, informal settlement growth is the most perceptible. The current study deploys a case study approach to explore informal settlements in order to fully understand the intricate socioeconomic and physical issues that arise in these settlements. Fieldwork, which involved in-depth interviews, casual conversations, and photography surveys, was used to conduct this research. The data was collected using a proportionate and random sampling technique, with 80 samples from Shamspura Colony and 67 from Zia Colony obtained using Solvin’s formula. Geographic Information Systems (GIS) were used to ensure that the data was geographically dispersed throughout the settlement.. The outcomes showed diversity in the two selected case study areas, namely Zia Colony and Shamspura Colony, in terms of the built environment, social aspects, governance issues, and economic opportunities. This research offers a more multifaceted synthesis of the problem by bringing together the social and physical constructs which may lead to a greater understanding of informal settlements issues and better strategies for addressing them at the local, national, and regional levels.
Keywords: built landscape;informality;informal settlements;slum housing;urbanism;urban mapping;urban morphology
Document URI: http://hdl.handle.net/1942/40588
ISSN: 2617-2690
e-ISSN: 2617-2704
DOI: 10.32350/10.32350/jaabe.61.04
Category: A2
Type: Journal Contribution
Appears in Collections:Research publications

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