|
Why Housing Rights?...
UN - HABITAT
Current rates of population growth and urban-rural migration,
particularly in developing countries, have serious impacts on
living conditions in human settlements. By the beginning of the
third millennium, it is estimated that 1.1 billion people live
in inadequate housing conditions in urban areas alone. In many
cities of developing countries, more than half of the population
lives in informal settlements, without security of tenure and
in conditions that can be described as life and health threatening.
Among an estimated 100 million homeless people around the world,
available data suggest that increasing proportions are women and
children.
The annual need for housing in urban areas of developing countries
alone is estimated at around 35 million units (during 2000-2010).
The bulk of these, some 21 million units, are required to cater
for the needs of the increasing number of households. The rest
is needed to meet the requirements of people who are homeless
or living in inadequate housing. In other words, some 95,000 new
urban housing units have to be constructed each day in developing
countries to improve housing conditions to acceptable levels.
While increasing housing production and improving existing housing
stock are very important in every society, these activities must
run parallel with actions that specifically address and focus
on the human rights aspects. A rights-based approach to development
in the housing sector can:
* Empower the poor and the homeless;
* Promote security of tenure, particularly for women and vulnerable
groups in inadequate housing conditions;
* Strengthen protection against forced evictions and discrimination
in the housing sector; and
* Promote equal access to housing resources and remedies in cases
of violations of housing rights.
|
|