| Literature DB >> 29313840 |
Debraj Roy1,2, Bharath Palavalli3, Niveditha Menon4, Robin King5,6, Karin Pfeffer1, Michael Lees1,7, Peter M A Sloot1,2,7.
Abstract
In 2010, an estimated 860 million people were living in slums worldwide, with around 60 million added to the slum population between 2000 and 2010. In 2011, 200 million people in urban Indian households were considered to live in slums. In order to address and create slum development programmes and poverty alleviation methods, it is necessary to understand the needs of these communities. Therefore, we require data with high granularity in the Indian context. Unfortunately, there is a paucity of highly granular data at the level of individual slums. We collected the data presented in this paper in partnership with the slum dwellers in order to overcome the challenges such as validity and efficacy of self reported data. Our survey of Bangalore covered 36 slums across the city. The slums were chosen based on stratification criteria, which included geographical location of the slum, whether the slum was resettled or rehabilitated, notification status of the slum, the size of the slum and the religious profile. This paper describes the relational model of the slum dataset, the variables in the dataset, the variables constructed for analysis and the issues identified with the dataset. The data collected includes around 267,894 data points spread over 242 questions for 1,107 households. The dataset can facilitate interdisciplinary research on spatial and temporal dynamics of urban poverty and well-being in the context of rapid urbanization of cities in developing countries.Entities:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29313840 PMCID: PMC5759370 DOI: 10.1038/sdata.2017.200
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Data ISSN: 2052-4463 Impact factor: 6.444
Minor modifications of questionnaire based on the interests of slum dwellers.
| 1 | Education | Ability to read and write | Add a sub-question on ability to read and write |
| 2 | Employment | Seasonality of jobs | Modified questionnaire to add seasonality to nature of job |
| 3 | Migration | Movement within Bangalore | Added questions on reasons for movement within different slums |
| 4 | Mobility | Different options used for different needs | Sub-divided questions to work, education, household purchases |
| 5 | Water | Multiple sources of water | Added section on sources of water |
| 6 | Borrowing for land | Borrowing through multiple sources | Added questions on specific sources and details on interest rate, term and EMI |
| 7 | Assets | Assets were mostly second hand | Question modified to include price paid at the time of acquisition |
Minor modifications of questionnaire after pilot survey.
| 1 | Education | Attending informal school or training | Added non-formal schooling |
| 2 | Employment | Employee benefits or welfare | Added question on benefits and welfare |
| 3 | Self Employment | We spend our own resources | Questions added for instruments used, capital invested and the source of the capital. |
| 4 | Transportation | Information about transport | Changes made to ensure that information sources are captured |
| 5 | Water | Payment mode and collectivisation | Added questions on to whom was the payment made for water and on how private modes of water is bargained for and delivered. |
| 6 | Issues, Agency Benefits | There are some people who help with problems | Questions modified on organisation working on welfare of slums and actors who interact with the slum dwellers |
Two rounds of survey were implemented between June 2010 and March 2011.
| 1 | Surveyed 20 slums | Slums were surveyed and households unavailable (comment 3) were marked. They were then revisited in the second round. |
| 2 | Surveyed remaining 16 slums | This breakdown was based on availability of the survey team and access to the slums. Households that were unavailable (comment 3), were revisited during the spot-checking phase to collect the data. |
Figure 1Household Size Distribution across the 36 slums in Bangalore.
Gender and Age Distribution across the 36 slums in Bangalore.
| Gender | Male | 49.01 |
| Female | 49.35 | |
| Transgender | 0.19 | |
| Age | Under 18 | 34.93 |
| 18–24 | 17.64 | |
| 25–34 | 17.89 | |
| 34–60 | 25.34 | |
| 60 above | 4.19 |
Figure 2Income Distribution of Slum Dwellers in the 36 slums of Bangalore.
Comparison of CPI between slums and non-slum households.
| Source:Central Statistics Office, February 11, 2014. | ||
|---|---|---|
| Food & Water | 38.26 | 55.91 |
| Fuel | 8.82 | 3.12 |
| Housing | 26.04 | 7.23 |
| Clothing | 2.59 | 0.59 |
| Education | 2.37 | 1.11 |
| Health Care | 3.45 | 7.21 |
| Entertainment | 2.10 | 2.34 |
| Transportation | 9.56 | 11.21 |
Sources of Finance for Self-Employment.
| 1. Own sources | 37.29 |
| 2. Informal borrowing(no interest) | 7.63 |
| 3. Informal loan or money lender | 46.61 |
| 4. Formal loan(without collateral) | 5.08 |
| 6. Other | 3.39 |
Housing types based on construction material.
| Kutcha | 40.50 |
| Semi-pucca | 19.74 |
| Pucca | 39.75 |