A charter designed by civil society organisations, workers’ collectives and the urban poor reimagines our cities
- While agrarian distress has slipped into the pre-election discourse as an important political subject, it is imperative to ask why the urban question is no less political.
- India’s cities are grappling with acute urban livelihood issues relating to jobs, housing, migration, living conditions, mobility, sanitation, climate change and sustainability.
- A group of civil society organisations, workers’ collectives, and over two lakh urban poor across India have been deliberating on a citizens’ charter of demands for inclusive and just urban development — words that most governments have only been paying lip service to.
- It is appalling that despite occupying only about 5% of urban land, slum dwellers in cities are labelled as encroachers.
- These people, who constitute 30% of the population in cities, often live in subhuman conditions without basic services.
Charter Recommendations
- The charter looks at housing as a fundamental right and proposes to confer land titles on slum dwellers.
- It proposes a zero-eviction policy, in situ slum upgradation programmes that focus not on the number of houses built but also on ownership rights and service provision.
- It proposes that self-built houses by city dwellers be recognised.
- The majority of these residents constitute urban ‘informal’ workers (about 20 crore people) who have migrated due to rural distress, and termination of contracts and mass lay-offs in industries.
- The charter advocates universal minimum social security (as a portable scheme for the benefit of migrant workers), which includes healthcare, maternity, insurance, pension benefits, and fixing universal minimum wages.
- It welcomes the proposal for a National Urban Employment Scheme, recognising the right to work.
- It also emphasises the need for gender-friendly cities and infrastructure.
- And given that cities contribute more than 60% to India’s GDP, it advocates that a minimum of 5% of this GDP be used for the development of urban areas, up from the current 1%, through Central schemes.
- We must reimagine our cities by rejecting inequalities, unjust designs, and unsustainable growth, and redefine the urban agenda from the lens of the working poor, with participative planning at its heart.
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