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2015 | OriginalPaper | Chapter

10. Local Action Planning for Pro-Poor Urban Governance in the Southern Megacity of Chennai, India

Authors : T. Vasantha Kumaran, Divya Rajeswari Swaminathan

Published in: Urban Development Challenges, Risks and Resilience in Asian Mega Cities

Publisher: Springer Japan

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Abstract

This paper is about the poor of Chennai and in fact slums and how they may be governed by themselves. The paper recognizes that the poor are not only the majority on the planet; they are everywhere and the smallest event speaks of them. And the urge on our part to speak about them—about what they can do and how they may excel in their own governance—is because of the urge they show up to live like the others and, interrupted by moments of illumination in their life of constant grief, to hold hands with other people. This paper retells the story of how a slum community rose to the occasion of self-organizing for its own development through efforts of its own members in the last few years. It is indeed a serious time period in which the pro-poor policies are emerging. And ‘there is a ceaseless spatial negotiation which is considerate or cruel, conciliating or dominating, unthinking or calculated’, to borrow the words of John Berger. Inside the homes of the poor, there is the kindly exchange, accommodation, even physical, and psychological sharing. But, outside of their homes, the space of choices is limited. And in slums of Chennai, every choice is starker. We live in a time of considerable change, which has placed new demands on local governments and raised a number of questions about the ability of these institutions along with other levels of government to address and resolve the problems that arise within contemporary communities. Traditional local governments are being questioned about the ability of their existing expert-driven and fragmented planning processes to resolve the problems that arise within contemporary communities. This has triggered the emergence of local government planning processes aimed at supporting more integrative and inclusive forms of planning that engage public, community and private sector players. This paper provides insights into the emerging local action planning processes from a case study of a Chennai slum which in fact enabled a broader range of players to participate in determining how the slum community self-organized to show the slum people’s capabilities in working together for their own betterment and governance of little that does matter for the community. Drawing on the case study of a slum, the paper provides insights into the problems and possibilities that the slum communities face in their attempts to make the city an inclusive city that supports the development of more integrative and inclusive forms of planning within contemporary Indian urban milieu.

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Footnotes
1
We are unable to fully report on the myriad activities that went on in the last four years nor are we able to give the readers a very comprehensive account of events, flows and disruptions that occurred during the entire project of three phases (ecosystem approach, self-organizational and outcome mapping phases). Suffice it to say that the project was very intensively carried out, in all its phases, with shortcomings and upheavals bothering us along the way with more or less in a continuous manner. We are trying to put you in/on our feet and make you walk the length and breadth of the Chennai field sites and take a peek into the minds of our people to feel the pain and suffering and be part of the space for compassion within which we have operated with so many people with all kinds of comings and goings. We also want you to take pride in what we have achieved, which is still in a way very small indeed.
 
2
We are talking about Anjukudisai, which is a small slum located on the banks of the most polluted waterway, Cooum at Chintadripet, Chennai. It is an objectionable slum by the categorization of the Corporation. Its inhabitants are daily wage workers who work at the fish market. Women are mostly maid servants in the local middle class households. It has 250 mortar houses and 100 thatched huts. Hygiene levels are very low and the homes (they cannot be considered residences) are used for all purposes from cooking, washing, eating and to sleeping. With minimum of vents, it is haven for all germs. Garbage is dumped right next to the Cooum, which clog the drainages. There is always an unpleasant odour in the air and is also a natural habitat for worms and insects. Mosquitoes are a menace. In the beginning of the project, people were reluctant, indifferent and arrogant. Outsiders were, and are still to an extent, unwelcome.
There is a visible and gradual transformation now in the mindset of the people. They are indeed nice people, given to altruism of the highest order, and friendly and they do welcome the outsiders as long as they don’t exploit them for their own good. After four years of our work, in their midst, with as many as 100 people as partners in various capacities, the children of the slum are clean enough and the youth have forgotten their old ways and are employed, in the city, and are making ‘men and women of themselves’ with respect for work and honesty. They are into their sports, with a cricket team now competing with the best of the city teams and winning laurels, under the aegis of the David Morley Cricket Club (named after one of our senior, Canadian researchers).
There is enormous potential hidden in the children and youth of Anjukudisai, waiting in the wings to be tapped and harnessed. In order to channelize their talents and potentials, various programs have been launched with self-organized groups of women, youth and children that the local action planning for community development has become a reality. Some of the activities that have been implemented involving children, youth and women in Anjukudisai are: summer training program for children, formation of CBOs, awareness camps (health, small savings, HIV/AIDS), health camps (diagnosis and prescriptions), tree planting, street plays, psychological counselling, skills and livelihoods training, youth sports and cultural activities and evening tuition classes, to name a few.
In fact, in the beginning, there were two slums, the other being Pallavan Nagar along the beach. It was also a small slum, a fishing community, right on the beach and land belonging to the Public Works Department. It was washed off by the December 2004 tsunami. Twelve people died. The survivors were moved to Kargil Vetri Nagar first and then to Tsunami Nagar and the project team continued to visit them and are still in contact with them although, they are now rehabilitated in VOC Nagar and Tilagar Nagar of North Chennai. The CBOs organised by them are still operative and they are also active in community development activities of their own.
 
3
Throughout the paper we have used ‘you’ to narrate events and outcomes in the slum community. This was intentional because we wanted the narrator to be various people from the research team, community, including you, the reader of this paper. We do believe we haven’t caused chaos but deliberately made the narrative interesting enough. If we have succeeded in conveying the inner spaces, especially the spaces of compassion in each of the community members and in each of us, we would say that is our success of retelling the story of a simple and brave people, braving this very minute the life in their lived, social worlds, enduring the face of walls, the unconcerned, the politicians, the bureaucrats and the not-so-benevolent amongst us.
 
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Metadata
Title
Local Action Planning for Pro-Poor Urban Governance in the Southern Megacity of Chennai, India
Authors
T. Vasantha Kumaran
Divya Rajeswari Swaminathan
Copyright Year
2015
Publisher
Springer Japan
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/978-4-431-55043-3_10