Journal ArticleOpen Access
Contrasting adaptation responses by squatters and low-income tenants in Khulna, Bangladesh
Authors
Author Affiliations
University of Manchester, BRAC University
Published InEnvironment and Urbanization
Year2013
Citations49
Abstract
This paper examines patterns of adaptive behaviour in low-income settlements (1) in Khulna, Bangladesh’s third largest city. It contrasts the adaptive behaviours of “squatter” households who “own” their land with those of tenants who rent dwellings from private landlords, and finds significant differences between the adaptive behaviours of owners and renters. This is important, as most knowledge about low-income settlements in Bangladesh originates from “owned” settlements – often called “public settlements”, as the land is officially public land. But the future growth of low-income settlements in the country is likely to be increasingly on private land, with rented dwellings. Policy lessons generated from settlements with “squatters” may be inappropriate for the next generation of “slums” that will house millions of…
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