Vol. 1 No. 1 (2021)
Informal Settlements, Urban Governance, and the Social Welfare Conundrum in Tanzanian Cities: A Perspective for the Mid-2020s
Abstract
Rapid urbanisation in Tanzania has led to the proliferation of informal settlements, presenting a persistent challenge for urban governance and the equitable provision of social welfare. These areas, often characterised by tenure insecurity and inadequate infrastructure, remain largely outside formal planning and service delivery frameworks. This perspective piece critically examines the evolving relationship between informal urban growth, municipal governance structures, and social welfare outcomes. It aims to analyse the underlying governance conundrum and propose a forward-looking framework for the mid-2020s. The analysis synthesises findings from existing literature, policy documents, and the author's professional observations within the field of African urban studies, employing a critical policy analysis lens. A central theme is the counterproductive nature of punitive, enforcement-led governance approaches, which exacerbate exclusion. Analysis indicates that community-driven enumeration and mapping, when recognised by authorities, can increase security of tenure for up to 70% of residents in pilot areas, forming a critical foundation for service provision. Prevailing governance models are misaligned with the scale and social dynamics of informal urbanisation, perpetuating welfare deficits. A fundamental shift towards inclusive, co-productive governance is essential. Municipal authorities should institutionalise participatory slum upgrading programmes, integrate community-collected spatial data into formal planning systems, and pilot innovative cross-subsidisation models for infrastructure financing. urban governance, informal settlements, social welfare, co-production, Tanzania, slum upgrading This perspective introduces and elaborates the concept of 'negotiated informality' as a necessary governance mechanism for the mid-2020s, arguing for its institutionalisation to bridge the gap between formal planning and on-the-ground realities.
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