Slum Rehabilitation Promise to Mumbai's 20 Million

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Aerial View of Mumbai; Courtesy of Flickr User Cactus Bones; Licensed via Creative Commons

Slums, shanty-towns, favelas - they are all products of an exploding migration from rural to urban areas. Over the last half century, people living in or near metropolises has risen in proportion to the global population. Migrations from rural areas to urban areas have grown exponentially as cities have developed into hubs of economic activity and job growth promising new opportunities for social mobility and education. Yet, with all these perceptions holding fast, many people who choose to migrate find themselves in the difficult circumstances of integrating into an environment without the proper resources to accommodate the growing population. Cities, for example, like Mumbai, India's largest city and 11th on the list as of 2012 with a population of an estimated 20.5 million. According to a New York Times article from 2011, about 60% of that number live in the makeshift dwellings that now occupy lucrative land for Mumbai's developers.

More to come after the break.

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Cite: Irina Vinnitskaya. "Slum Rehabilitation Promise to Mumbai's 20 Million" 19 Jan 2013. ArchDaily. Accessed . <https://www.archdaily.com/320505/slum-rehabilitation-promise-to-mumbais-20-million> ISSN 0719-8884

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