Teses / dissertações sobre o tema "Urban poor – case studies"
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Pratt, Jennifer D. (Jennifer Dana). "Housing the urban poor--a case for space-sharing in Ahmedabad, India". Thesis, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1991. http://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/69273.
Texto completo da fonteLucenet, Frederic Pascal. "Land for housing the poor through urban agriculture : the case of Lusaka, Zambia". Thesis, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1988. http://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/76003.
Texto completo da fonteRaouf, Sina. "Shelter for the urban poor : is local government the answer? the case of Lusaka, Zambia". Thesis, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1987. http://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/76868.
Texto completo da fonteMICROFICHE COPY AVAILABLE IN ARCHIVES AND ROTCH.
Vita.
Bibliography: leaves 84-88.
by Sina Raouf.
M.C.P.
Tañada, Cristina R. "The sustainability of credit assistance to the urban poor : a Philippine case study". Thesis, McGill University, 1994. http://digitool.Library.McGill.CA:80/R/?func=dbin-jump-full&object_id=26340.
Texto completo da fonteTubbeh, Taghrid Khuri. "The Determinants of Women's Work: A Case Study from Three Urban Low-income Communities in Amman, Jordan". PDXScholar, 1994. https://pdxscholar.library.pdx.edu/open_access_etds/1208.
Texto completo da fonteFlores, Romero Karla Renata. "Changing the ability of the poor to generate income : Mexico's Conditional Cash Transfer program Oportunidades". Thesis, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 2010. http://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/62067.
Texto completo da fonteCataloged from PDF version of thesis.
Includes bibliographical references (p. 92-97).
Conditional Cash Transfer (CCT) programs have been adopted in many developing countries, particularly in Latin America, as the core strategy for poverty reduction. These programs provide immediate economic support to poor populations conditional on specific actions such as sending children to school or receiving healthcare. The main rationale behind this approach is that, once human capital accumulates, the poor will take full advantage of labor market opportunities and overcome poverty. Some scholars argue that, despite the remarkable positive impacts of these programs on human capital formation, the low growth rate of employment prevailing in most Latin American countries pose difficult challenges for achieving their ultimate goal of poverty reduction. Nevertheless, the generation of employment opportunities could be a direct consequence of these programs. I analyze this circumstance by evaluating the likelihood of households to invest cash transfers in business creation. Using longitudinal data from the Mexican Family Life Survey (MxFLS), I assess the impact of the Mexican CCT program, Oportunidades, on the creation of businesses. For this purpose, I implement the difference-in-difference (DD) method and, to account for the non-experimental nature of the study, I use Rosenbaum and Rubin's propensity score matching method. Finally, I identify some of the characteristics of beneficiary households that are more likely to invest using a difference-in-difference-in-difference (DDD) estimator. The results indicate that beneficiary households in rural and urban areas are more likely to create businesses than non-beneficiary households. This may be a relevant finding for the design of this type of policy instruments, especially if the promotion of income-generating activities can be achieved as an alternate goal. Cash-transfer investments, coupled with additional mechanisms of support such as entrepreneurial development programs, could contribute not only to short-term poverty alleviation, but also to a long-term, sustainable solution to poverty.
by Karla Renata Flores Romero.
M.C.P.
Edgecomb, Elizabeth. "Looking Good and Taking Care: Consumer Culture, Identity, and Poor, Minority, Urban Tweens". Scholar Commons, 2010. http://scholarcommons.usf.edu/etd/3474.
Texto completo da fonteFERNANDEZ, JOSE RAUL. "NEIGHBORHOOD VITALITY AND THE URBAN POOR: What Makes the Difference on Meeting Basic Needs? Case Studies in Santiago De Los Caballeros". Thesis, The University of Arizona, 1997. http://hdl.handle.net/10150/555330.
Texto completo da fonteArriaga, Cordero Eugenio. "Explaining Unequal Transportation Outcomes in a Gentrifying City: the Example of Portland, Oregon". PDXScholar, 2017. https://pdxscholar.library.pdx.edu/open_access_etds/3509.
Texto completo da fonteMillward, Alison J. "Affordable downtown housing : innovative U.S. municipal initiatives and a case study of Seattle". Thesis, University of British Columbia, 1990. http://hdl.handle.net/2429/29996.
Texto completo da fonteApplied Science, Faculty of
Community and Regional Planning (SCARP), School of
Graduate
Sousa, Carina Isabel Correia de. "Diversidade genética e resistência natural ao Maraviroc em estirpes do vírus da imunodeficiência humana Tipo 1 (HIV-1) em circulação em utilizadores de drogas por via endovenosa na Grande Lisboa". Master's thesis, Faculdade de Ciências Médicas. Universidade Nova de Lisboa, 2012. http://hdl.handle.net/10362/8170.
Texto completo da fonteRuiz-Cepeda, Maria de los Remedios. "The urban-poor challenge : delivering services for the urban poor : government organizations versus non-government organizations (NGOs)". Thesis, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1988. http://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/77332.
Texto completo da fonteZhu, Erqian. "Urban poor in China a case study of Changsha /". abstract and full text PDF (free order & download UNR users only), 2007. http://0-gateway.proquest.com.innopac.library.unr.edu/openurl?url_ver=Z39.88-2004&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:dissertation&res_dat=xri:pqdiss&rft_dat=xri:pqdiss:1442876.
Texto completo da fonteTshabalala, Thandeka. "The Urban Poor, Civic Governmentality and the Problem of Participation". Master's thesis, Faculty of Humanities, 2021. http://hdl.handle.net/11427/33047.
Texto completo da fonteKekana, Daniel Senkgoa. "A socio-economic analysis of urban agriculture the Soshanguve project case study /". Pretoria : [s.n.], 2006. http://upetd.up.ac.za/thesis/available/etd-08272007-154407.
Texto completo da fonteChona, Quiñónez Gilberto Enrique. "Housing the poor in Venezuela : from policy to specific targets". Thesis, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1991. http://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/65208.
Texto completo da fonteIncludes bibliographical references (leaves 75-78).
by Gilberto Enrique Chona Quiñónez.
M.C.P.
Watanabe, Nobuhide 1967. "Business valuation of location-specific infrastructure projects in data-poor regions". Thesis, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 2000. http://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/16750.
Texto completo da fonteIncludes bibliographical references (leaves 56-57).
This electronic version was submitted by the student author. The certified thesis is available in the Institute Archives and Special Collections.
A methodology in determining the financial values (business values) of physical infrastructure projects is presented from the public point of view. The business valuation model in this thesis adopts three concepts of financial modeling, Monte Carlo simulation (probability-generated cash flow), Capital Asset Pricing Model, and Adjusted Present Value. Using this model, the business values of a hypothetical infrastructure project are simulated 1,000 times and the mean business value is analyzed in terms of patterns and magnitudes of the simulation. The results from the 1,000 simulations showed large differences between the value derived by this model and those by the traditional net present value method. Also, this model elucidated qualitative information on how levels of government’s financial support such as subsidies, tax incentives and revenue guarantees will affect the project’s business value by components. The model elucidated, as well, the qualitative information on how project’s contractual framework may affect the business value when private contractors bear key uncertain risks, such as demand changes and construction cost overruns.
by Nobuhide Watanabe.
S.M.in Urban Studies and Planning; and, S.M.in Real Estate Development
Ozen, Yelda. "Health And Illness Experiences Among The Urban Poor: The Case Of Altindag". Phd thesis, METU, 2008. http://etd.lib.metu.edu.tr/upload/3/12609438/index.pdf.
Texto completo da fonteltepe, via face to face interviews with 40 individuals. A main finding has been that the different forms of capital, in volume as well as in composition, had an influence on the urban poor&rsquo
s health perceptions, health care access, health seeking strategies and experiences in health institutions. The rural-urban migrants refer to a habitus in relation to health which still strongly relies on their rural practices. Major differences among men and women have been observed, where men seem to be more open to integrate into the urban dispositions. Economic capital plays a crucial role. Regular income earners do tend to emphasize that they have a certain autonomy and control over their health. On the other hand, benefit dependent poor mention that they have less control over their health. Economic capital can be seen as very much the same among the group studied, but the differences in health experiences rely strongly on Cultural capital is understood as their different identities: villager/non-villager
illiterate/ non-illiterate
women/men
healthy/non-healthy. Social capital (formal and informal solidarity networks) is studied as the role in health experiences, access to health care and strategies to use the existing health system
as well as how individuals support each other materially and immaterially. Social capital is important because it converts into economic capital, not as exchange but as use value. An analysis of the different forms of capital allows us to address at the interrelationship of structural conditions in the field and the practices actors experience through their internalized habitus. Health experiences therefore differ even among a socio-economic homogenous group. In addition to the above mentioned forms of capital, it is also argued that health itself should be considered as a form of capital. Health capital (self perceived health/illness and medically diagnosed disease) influences and is influenced by the other forms of capital.
Akbar, H. M. Delwar. "Accessibility of the urban water supply to the poor in developing countries : the case of Dhaka, Bangladesh /". [St. Lucia, Qld.], 2005. http://www.library.uq.edu.au/pdfserve.php?image=thesisabs/absthe18725.pdf.
Texto completo da fonteSerrano, Berthet Rodrigo. "Why do poor people demand accountability from some participatory programs and not others?" Thesis, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 2005. http://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/34166.
Texto completo da fonteIncludes bibliographical references (leaves 163-170).
There is a consensus that citizen oversight, or the capacity of citizens to demand accountability, over government programs improves program performance. Yet little is known about the conditions that enable citizens/beneficiaries to demand accountability. This dissertation approaches this void in the literature by comparing two Community Driven Development (CDD) programs in Argentina and asking the question of why beneficiary oversight was higher in one program than in the other and why, within the same program, it was higher in some provinces than in others. The main conclusions are: (i) for beneficiary oversight to work at the project level (i.e., for beneficiaries to be able to control subcontracted providers of technical assistance) it was not sufficient to have accountability mechanisms at that level (in this case being able to hire and fire providers); (ii) due to asymmetries of technical knowledge and power between beneficiaries and providers, the former depended on the support of program staff willing to level out these asymmetries; (iii) given a highly politicized context, ensuring that program staff supported beneficiaries at the project level required having beneficiary oversight at the program governance level; in the program where this did not happen, patronage and clientelism took over the program, distorted its participatory nature and led to its collapse;
(cont.) (iv) when beneficiary oversight took place at the program governance level it was due to (a) the program's commitment to support the consolidation of beneficiaries as a political actor capable of interacting with government, which expressed through (b) the creation of institutional mechanisms for program governance oversight that provided access to information about the program's performance, (c) the strengthening of supra-local networks at the national, provincial, and local level which increased beneficiaries' capacity for collective action and leverage; and (d) the construction of the program as part of the beneficiaries identity, which motivated them to mobilize to defend the program. (v) Intra program variation (across provinces) in beneficiary oversight was related to the capacity of state and civil society actors to resolve successfully the tensions involved in relations of critical collaboration (i.e., relations where actors need to collaborate with each other while remaining critical and vigilant of maintaining their autonomy).
by Rodrigo Serrano-Berthet.
Ph.D.
Goyes, Francis Jhoan. "The politics of implementation : towards a pro-poor land legalization policy in Quito". Thesis, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 2017. http://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/111388.
Texto completo da fonteCataloged from PDF version of thesis.
Includes bibliographical references (pages [99]-107).
This thesis explores Quito's historical development of policies for informal neighborhood legalization to analyze the relationship between the national government, municipal council and low-income neighborhoods of the City. I follow Gilbert and Ward's reasoning of regarding the State as a political entity, and its policies of land as a proxy of its relation to the most vulnerable populations (Ward 1985). I ask how constitutional and legislative arrangements were implemented through different political moments, and in what ways their implementation contributed to the successes and failures of the land legalization efforts of Quito using a pro-poor framework. I concentrate on the policies enacted by the last three Municipal administrations as well as Regula tu Barrio (Legalize your Neighborhood), the current program for legalizing informal settlements in Quito. While legalization policies have existed since the late 1980s, they were never fully operationalized due to the low capacity of the Municipality, clientelist practices and lack of continued political interest. Through a pro-poor policy analysis, I argue that following the ratification of the 2008 Constitution and other national legislation, the Municipality had a greater responsibility towards establishing a pro-poor policy towards land legalization, which resulted in an increase of legalized neighborhoods and basic infrastructure provision for previously informal settlements. I also show that while there appears to be continuity through Municipal administrations, difficulties for legalization remain, including evaluation mechanisms, overcoming obstacles of land traffickers and community organizations and creation of a comprehensive policy for land and housing.
by Francis Jhoan Goyes.
M.C.P.
Tagle, Laura. "Inadvertently reaching the poor : the diffusion of small scale irrigation in northeast Brazil". Thesis, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1996. http://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/35475.
Texto completo da fonteRobb, Carla. "Housing for the poor: A case study of the Johannesburg inner city". Master's thesis, University of Cape Town, 2018. http://hdl.handle.net/11427/29689.
Texto completo da fonteMarshall, Sunaree (Sunaree Kim). "Of squatters and schemes : considering city-level strategies for housing the poor in India". Thesis, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 2010. http://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/59580.
Texto completo da fonteThis electronic version was submitted by the student author. The certified thesis is available in the Institute Archives and Special Collections.
Cataloged from student submitted PDF version of thesis.
Includes bibliographical references (p. 56-59).
This thesis examines two approaches to housing the urban poor in the city of Ahmedabad in the Indian state of Gujarat - the Slum Networking Project, an attempt to institutionalize slum upgrading at the city-level and the Development Plan-Town Planning Scheme mechanism, an enabling approach similar to land readjustment that seeks to deliver serviced land to the urban land market and contains a provision to reserve some of this land for housing for economically weaker sections of society. Given the shifts in thinking in the past three decades around housing policies in developing countries, and particularly in India, from project-level approaches to enabling approaches that attempt to tackle housing shortages and substandard quality at a broader scale, this thesis asks the question: What is the appropriate role of cities in adequately housing their poor populations? In conjunction with this, additional questions explored include: What has been the history of housing strategies in India? What are some relatively successful efforts that are not national-level policies or small community-level projects, but instead use the scale of the city to address this pressing issue? What are the barriers to bringing these methods to scale?This thesis finds that while upgrading approaches may provide basic services to slum dwellers at the project level, attempts to take upgrading to scale must carefully consider the prevalence and implementation capacity of NGO or other intermediaries, the demand of residents for the services offered, the incentives for participation by private sector entities and the pace of urbanization in the city in question.With respect to the Town Planning Scheme mechanism, there has been considerable success in converting agricultural land to serviced urban land and in appropriated land for housing for the urban poor, but concerns remain about the overly centralized nature of the process, its openness to corruption, and its neglect to consider informal or tenants claims on the land to be developed. Finally, it is found that the mere designation and availability of urban land for housing for the poor is not sufficient to instigate housing production and more research is needed to determine appropriate policies to encourage affordable housing development on this land.
by Sunaree Marshall.
M.C.P.
Quirós, Rosa M. (Rosa Maria). "Rural water supplies that work, endure, and reach the poor : lessons from Ceara, Brazil". Thesis, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1996. http://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/69359.
Texto completo da fonteMitter, Anjali 1973. "Water for the urban poor : Côte d'Ivoire's experiment with private and informal sector cooperation". Thesis, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1999. http://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/9325.
Texto completo da fonteIncludes bibliographical references (leaves 72-73).
The urban poor in developing countries, many of whom live in illegal squatter settlements at the periphery of the city, often have insufficient access to affordable, clean water. Both public and private utilities are often unable or unwilling to install piped water connections in these neighborhoods, and, as a result, the poor tend to rely on individual, informal vendors who sell water at very high prices. In an effort to bridge this service gap and provide the urban poor with easy and affordable access to water without investing in costly infrastructure, some public utilities have tried to form agreements with vendors to use them as an extension of their distribution network. In an era of increasing private sector participation in water treatment and distribution, some private companies are considering similar arrangements. This thesis presents the results of field-work conducted in Abidjan, Côte d'Ivoire, where the private water utility has, since 1960, attempted to forge a partnership with vendors in the informal sector. The system of "registered vending" that the utility has implemented is promising in that, as long as the utility is prohibited by law from extending the network into illegally settled neighborhoods, it enables the residents of these neighborhoods to obtain at least a minimal amount of clean water. However, the system could be strengthened, and the lessons learned from this experiment may be helpful for other private utilities considering similar cooperative arrangements with water vendors in the informal sector.
by Anjali Mitter.
M.C.P.
Tavon, Joyce S. (Joyce Shadi). "Neighborhood-based services for the poor : re-examining Morgan Memorial and the Settlement House movement". Thesis, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1993. http://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/42555.
Texto completo da fonteNahiduzzaman, Kh Md. "HOUSING THE URBAN POOR: AN INTEGRATED GOVERNANCE PERSPECTIVE : The Case of Dhaka, Bangladesh". Doctoral thesis, KTH, Urbana och regionala studier, 2012. http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:kth:diva-90297.
Texto completo da fonteQC 20120221
Manase, Gift. "Cost recovery for sanitation services : the case of poor urban areas in Zimbabwe". Thesis, University of Southampton, 2003. http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.274072.
Texto completo da fonteSyed, Mohammed Ali. "Explaining fertility outcomes within the urban poor : a case study of Chittagong, Bangladesh". Thesis, SOAS, University of London, 2016. http://eprints.soas.ac.uk/23795/.
Texto completo da fonteConnors, Genevieve. "Watering the slums : how a utility and its street-level bureaucrats connected the poor in Bangalore". Thesis, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 2007. http://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/42262.
Texto completo da fonteIncludes bibliographical references (p. 265-275).
This dissertation is about how urban water utilities behave and what makes them interested in serving the poor. The infrastructure literature tends to treat public service agencies as monolithic entities and to ignore the great diversity of tasks and behavior patterns within them. As a consequence, common explanations for why utilities fail poor people tend to focus on attributes of the external environment in which utilities sit and not on the potential to elicit interest from within. This research corrects for this bias by applying a "street-level bureaucracy" approach to a study of a large urban water utility. The aim is to quash the notion so common in the water literature of a unified agency operating on the supply side and to rekindle an interest in the actions of workers. To do this, I examine the case of the Bangalore Water Supply and Sewerage Board (BWSSB) and its contrasting outcomes within the same case. Over a five year period from 2000 to 2005, the utility revised its operational policies to accommodate the legal and financial realities of slums and connected 5,000 households or five percent of the slum population to the water network. Although the BWSSB demonstrated an unusual commitment to the poor, its efforts were not an unmitigated success. Progress was slow and staff failed to connect households to the network in many of the slums targeted. This dissertation digs deep inside the utility to explain these contrasting outcomes holding the city, the agency, and the sector efficiency constant. I find that while external pressures were necessary to prompt a business-as-usual utility to take action in slums, variation in outcome can be explained by the different facets of engineering life in BWSSB service stations and the different kinds of relationships forged between frontline staff and slum dwellers.
(cont.) Specifically, a "willingness to supply" by engineers and the attainment of neighborhood deals were necessary conditions for a successful program outcome. This dissertation shows how these two conditions were met and highlights the critical role of the utility's Social Development Unit on both counts. It also shows how, in the process, certain kinds of conflict and resistance to reform had surprisingly positive effects. The main policy implications are that incentives must be aligned within utilities to elicit engineer buy-in and that well-staffed social development units are necessary to diffuse a new slum program to utility employees, to broker deals with slum dwellers, and to harness the benefits of resistance.
by Geneviève Connors.
Ph.D.
Serrano, Berthet Rodrigo. "Who knows what's best for the poor? : demand-driven policies and rural poverty in northeast Brazil". Thesis, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1996. http://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/26877.
Texto completo da fonteKordowicz, Maria Julia. "Understanding 'poor performing' General Practices : findings from five qualitative case studies". Thesis, King's College London (University of London), 2017. https://kclpure.kcl.ac.uk/portal/en/theses/understanding-poor-performing-general-practices(fc6f244d-b85c-46ac-9e0f-9b5a0927296f).html.
Texto completo da fontePunjani, Shahid (Shahid Nazmudin) 1976. "Providing security of tenure to the urban poor : investigating the roots of slum improvement in Hyderabad, India". Thesis, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 2002. http://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/69442.
Texto completo da fonteIncludes bibliographical references (leaves [71]-74).
This thesis is concerned with the relationship between urban land reform and large-scale slum improvement in Hyderabad, India. It forges a link between citywide slum improvement in the 1980s and efforts to guarantee the occupancy rights of squatters a decade earlier. More than twenty-five years have passed since the city undertook land reform. This distance offers an opportunity to re-examine the history of land reform and its impact on slum improvement and the city in general. Studies interested in learning from Hyderabad's experience often credit the "political will" of the Government of Andhra Pradesh or the Municipal Corporation of Hyderabad for the success of urban land reform in the city. In contrast, this thesis argues that Communist-led social movements, beginning as early as the 1940s, were a major influence in convincing the polity to acknowledge the land rights of the poor. In this way, political will is not equivalent to public benevolence or the charisma of a handful of decision makers; instead it emerges from challenging the political status quo. With the historical antecedents of land reform in mind, the thesis then investigates the current status of slums in the city. It concludes by enumerating conditions and caveats for cities contemplating the replication of Hyderabad's model for slum improvement and land reform.
by Shahid Punjani.
M.C.P.
Tanis, Duygu. "The Decline Of Community-based Solidarity Among The Urban Poor: The Case Of Bostancik Neighbourhood In Ankara". Master's thesis, METU, 2009. http://etd.lib.metu.edu.tr/upload/3/12611445/index.pdf.
Texto completo da fontesocio-spatial segregation of the poor communities from the wider society and the impact of this on the internal structure of these communities with special reference to the solidarity ties and networks. The findings of the research show that the urban poor have been excluded from the mainstream economy and such an exclusion is companied by their further exclusion from social and political processes and public spaces of the city which resulted with their confinement in such physical settings looking like ghetto. Likewise, the research findings point to the fact that in Bostancik Neighbourhood, the community relations revolving around supportive networks, so-called common norms and interests have been severely damaged by the increasing poverty and exclusion. What replaces such relations is a new life style characterised by fragmentation and atomisation of not only community but also other forms of solidarity. In turn, it is observed that there is a high level tension and hostility within the community. The overall findings show that as a result of the economic, social, political and spatial exclusion and social isolation, the communal characteristics of the neighbourhood have been largely dissolved in favour of an atomistic life style threatining the conditions of living together.
Greenstein, Daniel I. "Urban politics and the urban process : two case studies of Philadelphia". Thesis, University of Oxford, 1988. http://ora.ox.ac.uk/objects/uuid:ed50068a-eeb2-433a-b2ab-279c7296b95f.
Texto completo da fonteM, Mendez de M. Y. "A multidimensional approach to poverty among farmers in Mexico with small holdings : case studies /". [St. Lucia, Qld.], 2001. http://www.library.uq.edu.au/pdfserve.php?image=thesisabs/absthe16189.pdf.
Texto completo da fonteTang, York-wan Angela, e 鄧若韻. "Redevelopment and urban form". Thesis, The University of Hong Kong (Pokfulam, Hong Kong), 1996. http://hub.hku.hk/bib/B42574651.
Texto completo da fonteLukito, Penny Kusumastuti. "Urban water supply--the complimentarity between public hydrants and truck delivery : water service for the poor in North Jakarta, Indonesia". Thesis, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1994. http://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/68293.
Texto completo da fonteMajale, Michael Matthew. "Settlement upgrading in Kenya : the case for environmental planning and management strategies". Thesis, University of Newcastle Upon Tyne, 1998. http://hdl.handle.net/10443/969.
Texto completo da fonteParedes, Sadler Miguel. "Giving a voice to the poor : rural telephones and economic development in Peru". Thesis, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 2008. http://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/45366.
Texto completo da fonteIncludes bibliographical references (p. 81).
Although the current literature on technology and development has mainly focused on the Internet, I focus on a case where an "old" technology can be more beneficial and appropriate. In 1993, the Peruvian Government created the Telecommunications Investment Fund - FITEL, a fund aimed at providing subsidies to the private sector so that they would provide telecommunication services to remote and poor communities. FITEL's rural public telephone projects have had tremendous impacts on isolated and poor rural communities, providing an increase in welfare. The FITEL model has been replicated in many countries around the world as it has been considered successful by the literature and the development organizations. However, FITEL has also have drawn much criticism due to many problems that were unforeseen at the design phase of the projects. In this thesis we analyze how the political environment, the institutional arrangements, and the different actors affected the outcomes of the projects, providing some lessons to policy makers, especially those working on developing projects involving technology.
by Miguel Paredes Sadler.
S.M.
M.C.P.
Mayer, Richard Campbell. "Low-income housing in Kampala, Uganda : a strategy package to overcome barriers for delivering housing opportunities affordable to the urban poor". Thesis, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 2011. http://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/67233.
Texto completo da fonte"June 2011." Cataloged from PDF version of thesis.
Includes bibliographical references (p. 87-88).
The city of Kampala, Uganda, is struggling with a housing deficit that is compounding each year and creating market distortions that threaten to derail recent economic success and destabilize the social fabric of the community. The majority of government and private developers who build new housing are only providing units affordable to Kampala's minority of wealthy and well-connected elites. The majority of Kampala's residents are low-income earners who currently live in unplanned slum neighborhoods that consist of mostly informal rental housing. Inflating land values, exorbitant infrastructure costs and the lack of affordable home finance mechanisms are preventing the delivery of affordable housing to the majority of city residents. The same factors that are compounding the housing crisis in Kampala can be leveraged and reversed to create new opportunities that incentivize the private sector to deliver housing for the low-income market. Developers who construct middle-class housing products should be given tax discounts in exchange for formal commitments to deliver simple and well-planned housing estates for low-income families. This strategy provides a monetary incentive for private developers to bring their project management efficiencies into the low-income market and facilitates the government's need to placate social and political pressure to improve the local housing sector's performance for Ugandans at all levels of household income. To achieve these goals, pre-tax profits generated by a private developer utilizing tax incentives provided through a public/private partnership with government are reinvested into low-income housing projects built by the same developer. On the periphery of Kampala, where many development costs are significantly lower, new housing opportunities can be built and sold for a low price while generating a profit. Existing community groups and NGO programs can form a service network to help reduce the credit risk of low-income families and help them apply for "micromortgage" products to become homeowners and shift away from survival economics to working towards economic self-sufficiency. This program can be implemented to a large scale if supported by the "three pillars" of the "affordable housing cycle" that are: public/private development incentives, community training programs and customized low-income mortgage products. Government can achieve a more diversified real estate market and establish a formal planning process for suburban communities to accommodate the approaching urbanization of the city. Developers earn strong profits while expanding capacity and creating jobs. And finally, this strategy can begin a transformative process to bring poor families out of city slums and into formal housing, providing an avenue for increased civic engagement and entrepreneurship for people stuck in the poverty trap.
by Richard Campbell Mayer.
M.C.P.
Maxwell, Daniel M. "Water Governance in Bolivia: Policy Options for Pro-Poor Infrastructure Reform". Scholarship @ Claremont, 2013. http://scholarship.claremont.edu/cmc_theses/767.
Texto completo da fonteMohr, Jennifer A. "Persevering from the margins : families in poverty reveal their expectations for early childhood programs". Virtual Press, 2008. http://liblink.bsu.edu/uhtbin/catkey/1395463.
Texto completo da fonteDepartment of Elementary Education
Manouchehrifar, Babak. "The divine hand of the state? : how religion has influenced social policies for the poor in Iran". Thesis, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 2015. http://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/99095.
Texto completo da fonteThesis: S.M., Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Engineering Systems Division, 2015.
Cataloged from PDF version of thesis.
Includes bibliographical references (pages 96-101).
As a paramount concern in development planning, poverty alleviation encompasses a variety of agents and actions, depending on the larger context of organizations and political economy within which it is embedded. Iran has a distinctive constellation of religion, society, and politics. This thesis examines how religion has influenced the ways in which the poor have been helped in Iran since the formation of the (modem) nation-state in the 1870s. Religion has often been considered a monolithic institution that inherently supports or obstructs social policies for the poor. The notion of functional differentiation-and emancipation-of the state from the religious sphere constitutes the conventional understanding of how social policies are to be planned and implemented-a notion contrary to theocratic ideals. There exists a marked disparity between this secular understanding of social policy and the lived reality in many parts of the world, where such policies can generate resistance from their intended recipients, especially when they are considered to disrupt religious ties, imperil religious authority, and undermine traditional sources of social meaning. Therefore, how religion influences social relationships and how religious beliefs can help or hinder the formulating of social policies remain crucial issues. Religion in Iran has affected social policies in varied ways. First, as an organized set of beliefs, religion has invariably cultivated a moral-spiritual discourse to help the needy by motivating state officials who are in charge of social policies. Second, as an institution, religion has established, mediated, and unsettle relationships between the poor and the principal agents of poverty alleviation. Finally, as an instrument, religion has been used by the state to serve populist or security purposes. This thesis shows that if the 'guiding hand' of the state and the 'divine hand' of religious institutions are joined, the impact can be either regressive (particularly for religious minorities) or progressive, depending on a host of variables among which the central one is the historically produced power relationship between the two sets of dominant institutions. Herein lies a central dilemma for development planners: if modernization efforts do not take into account religious sentiments, which are a primary source of meaning for people, such efforts are bound to fail in the long term; and yet, if religious sentiments dominate state-making efforts, it can at best lead to 'charitable efforts' without deep constitutional groundings of the rights of the poor to state resources. Therefore, how to blend state policies and religious beliefs is a crucial issue if both religious extremism and state monopoly are to be avoided in crafting social policies.
by Babak Manouchehrifar.
M.C.P.
S.M.
Brasier, Alana. "Urban Greenways: The Case for the Selmon Greenway". Scholar Commons, 2011. http://scholarcommons.usf.edu/etd/3014.
Texto completo da fonteWan, Pengfei, e 萬鵬飛. "An institutional analysis of Chinese urban local governance: case studies of Urban ResidentialCommittees". Thesis, The University of Hong Kong (Pokfulam, Hong Kong), 2000. http://hub.hku.hk/bib/B31241116.
Texto completo da fonteSusnik, Ann Elizabeth. "Urban redevelopment and displacement outcomes : case studies of urban renewal in Hong Kong /". Thesis, Hong Kong : University of Hong Kong, 1997. http://sunzi.lib.hku.hk/hkuto/record.jsp?B18735666.
Texto completo da fonteCanepa, Claudia. "New information technologies in the old political economy : an exploration of community-based GIS for improving basic services for the poor in New Delhi, India". Thesis, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 2005. http://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/33012.
Texto completo da fonteIncludes bibliographical references (p. 217-223).
Rapid urbanization, limited neighborhood-level data, and the multiplicity of overlapping agencies in mega-cities in the developing world are creating a significant gap between citizens, particularly the poor, and government. Rising poverty rates have led NGOs and government actors to explore the role of community-based geographic information systems (GIS) in improving service provision to the poor. These participatory GIS applications focus on collecting neighborhood-level information directly from residents and providing this information to government for more need-based planning and policy-making. This thesis examines the development of three such applications in New Delhi, India, that illustrate the potential of participatory GIS production and implementation processes in strengthening communities and creating organizational change within government. However, these three projects also suggest that a stronger understanding of the political economy of information gathering and policy- making is needed if the use of resident perceptions and other types of local knowledge is to be institutionalized in government resource allocation and policy-making processes. Findings suggest, first, that, contrary to the popular belief that government lacks sufficient knowledge about the needs of the poor and that the role of participatory GIS is simply to inform "government," frontline workers have much information on the poor, and it is the higher-level officials who lack the knowledge. This knowledge differential highlights the need to deconstruct the state and consider the political economy issues that prevent information sharing between different levels of government.
(Cont.) Second, due to differences in ideology between NGOs and government, these two actors collect data on the poor for very different reasons. These differences may act as major impediments to GIS co-production unless special processes are set up and intermediaries are brought in to help generate common motivations between the two groups. Third, the NGOs' participatory approach to gathering local knowledge, which is deeply rooted in the flexible nature of NGOs, contrasts sharply with the standardized data collection methods that government officials and policy-makers value. This contrast, coupled with the fact that policy-making processes are often structured in ways that prevent easy incorporation of local knowledge, presents a challenge for NGOs and governments who seek to work together to create more need-based planning and policy-making.
by Claudia Canepa.
M.C.P.
Hollister, Matissa N. (Matissa Nicole) 1973. "The forgotten half : an exploration of factors behind the poor performance of low income men in Project Pioneer, a job training demonstration program in Maine". Thesis, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1998. http://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/67160.
Texto completo da fonte