Slums and squatters in Asian cities: a comparative study of Penang and Dhaks

Slums and squatters1 is predominantly a Third World phenomenon which has become very prominent recently; and as such it has now been increasing at a steady rate ever since. It has often been assumed that the squatters are the marginal population of the land who have been pushed to the unoccupied gov...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Karim, A.H.M Zehadul
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Serials Publications 2011
Subjects:
Online Access:http://irep.iium.edu.my/26693/
http://irep.iium.edu.my/26693/1/Squatter_Settlement_Pattern_in_Asian_Cities.pdf
id iium-26693
recordtype eprints
spelling iium-266932013-02-13T10:42:04Z http://irep.iium.edu.my/26693/ Slums and squatters in Asian cities: a comparative study of Penang and Dhaks Karim, A.H.M Zehadul H Social Sciences (General) Slums and squatters1 is predominantly a Third World phenomenon which has become very prominent recently; and as such it has now been increasing at a steady rate ever since. It has often been assumed that the squatters are the marginal population of the land who have been pushed to the unoccupied government and private lands in the urban centers, being victims of continuing rural proleterization. A differential scenario of the squatter settlement pattern in two Asian cities of Penang and Dhaka indicate that although the inhabitants of Dhaka Slums2 are mostly the rural people coming largely from the landless villagers of the peripheral regions throughout the country; the settlers in Penang on the other hand, is comprised of the urban dwellers coming from a multi-ethnic group of people from its surrounding peri-urban centers. Based on our field data from two squatter settlements of Penang and Dhaka, the paper identified basic differentiation in socio-economic characteristics of the settlers of both these groups of people. Based on our empirical data, the paper outlines a comparative situational analysis of the people living there in the slum areas of two rapidly growing cities of Asia. The paper concludes that this differential scenario confirms that squatter settlement has its own peculiarities and characteristics depending on the pace and level of urban development. Serials Publications 2011-03 Article PeerReviewed application/pdf en http://irep.iium.edu.my/26693/1/Squatter_Settlement_Pattern_in_Asian_Cities.pdf Karim, A.H.M Zehadul (2011) Slums and squatters in Asian cities: a comparative study of Penang and Dhaks. South Asian Anthropologist, 11 (1). pp. 19-28. ISSN 0257-7348
repository_type Digital Repository
institution_category Local University
institution International Islamic University Malaysia
building IIUM Repository
collection Online Access
language English
topic H Social Sciences (General)
spellingShingle H Social Sciences (General)
Karim, A.H.M Zehadul
Slums and squatters in Asian cities: a comparative study of Penang and Dhaks
description Slums and squatters1 is predominantly a Third World phenomenon which has become very prominent recently; and as such it has now been increasing at a steady rate ever since. It has often been assumed that the squatters are the marginal population of the land who have been pushed to the unoccupied government and private lands in the urban centers, being victims of continuing rural proleterization. A differential scenario of the squatter settlement pattern in two Asian cities of Penang and Dhaka indicate that although the inhabitants of Dhaka Slums2 are mostly the rural people coming largely from the landless villagers of the peripheral regions throughout the country; the settlers in Penang on the other hand, is comprised of the urban dwellers coming from a multi-ethnic group of people from its surrounding peri-urban centers. Based on our field data from two squatter settlements of Penang and Dhaka, the paper identified basic differentiation in socio-economic characteristics of the settlers of both these groups of people. Based on our empirical data, the paper outlines a comparative situational analysis of the people living there in the slum areas of two rapidly growing cities of Asia. The paper concludes that this differential scenario confirms that squatter settlement has its own peculiarities and characteristics depending on the pace and level of urban development.
format Article
author Karim, A.H.M Zehadul
author_facet Karim, A.H.M Zehadul
author_sort Karim, A.H.M Zehadul
title Slums and squatters in Asian cities: a comparative study of Penang and Dhaks
title_short Slums and squatters in Asian cities: a comparative study of Penang and Dhaks
title_full Slums and squatters in Asian cities: a comparative study of Penang and Dhaks
title_fullStr Slums and squatters in Asian cities: a comparative study of Penang and Dhaks
title_full_unstemmed Slums and squatters in Asian cities: a comparative study of Penang and Dhaks
title_sort slums and squatters in asian cities: a comparative study of penang and dhaks
publisher Serials Publications
publishDate 2011
url http://irep.iium.edu.my/26693/
http://irep.iium.edu.my/26693/1/Squatter_Settlement_Pattern_in_Asian_Cities.pdf
first_indexed 2023-09-18T20:39:44Z
last_indexed 2023-09-18T20:39:44Z
_version_ 1777409284248698880