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Issues urban population related News
There are 909 content items of different types and languages related to urban population on the Land Portal.
Displaying 1 - 12 of 57

Urban residents devise new techniques to overcome food insecurity.

21 August 2020

Residents in Namibia’s capital Windhoek are tapping into new techniques to grow food, overcoming food insecurity amid the biting COVID-19 pandemic.

In the heart of the bustling informal settlement of Goreangab, 42 -year-old Lucky Matunge is breaking new ground and growing vegetables in sacks that are filled with manure, sand and stones right at the back of her rental apartment.

Opinion - Exclusion in planning perpetrates poverty in informal settlements

31 July 2020

We should recognise that people in informal settlements have the same right to share the city with the same dignity and equality as other residents. Without the active participation of informal settlement residents in upgrading projects, any upgrading plans proposed are destined to flop. Post the pandemic, we (Namibian planning practitioners, donors and private sector) should look towards the inclusion of people in informal settlements communities in planning and upgrading of the informal settlements. 

Buenos Aires bold slum renewal forges ahead amid hopes and concerns

08 January 2020

Some residents fear development projects are going to push those with fewer resources out of the area which sits on prime real estate


BUENOS AIRES - Standing next to his self-built home reached by a steep ladder in a Buenos Aires slum, resident Miguel Romero is sceptical about the future despite ambitious government plans to improve the oldest shanty area in Argentina's capital.


"I built this home 11 years ago with good materials," Romero, a former builder turned taxi driver, said of his brick two-bedroom house.


Baking cities advance 'slowly' in race against rising heat threat

15 November 2019

'People should not and do not need to be dying in heatwaves'


LONDON - With urban populations surging around the world, cities will struggle to keep residents safe from fast-growing heat risks turbo-charged by climate change, scientists and public health experts warned this week.


Heat is already the leading cause of deaths from extreme weather in countries including the United States. The problem is particularly severe in cities, where temperature extremes are rising much faster than the global average, they said.


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