Slums in Semi-Arid Regions: An Analysis of the Vulnerability and Coping Strategies of Selected Neighbourhoods in the Wa Municipality, Ghana

Abstract

This study investigates the vulnerability of slum dwellers and the resulting coping strategies of three spontaneous neighbourhoods in the Wa Municipality of Ghana. The study relied on mixed methods with questionnaire administration as its main data collection technique focusing on the social, economic and environmental dimensions of slums. It found that, even among slum close neighbourhoods, the overall degree of vulnerability varies thereby representing a potential source of dynamic resource for small cites. Slums selected are less vulnerable to environmental issues than socioeconomic dimensions. The sustainability challenges therefore lie within the improvement of social and economic choices. An identification of place based capabilities, opportunities and localised constraints could serve as basis for designing of an appropriate planned intervention.

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Osumanu, I. K., Ahmed, A., Salia, R. A., Abdulai, A.-R., & Dongzagla, A. (2015) Slums in Semi-Arid Regions: An Analysis of the Vulnerability and Coping Strategies of Selected Neighbourhoods in the Wa Municipality, Ghana. Current Urban Studies, 3, 331-347. doi: 10.4236/cus.2015.34027.

Received 20 November 2015; accepted 6 December 2015; published 9 December 2015

1. Introduction

UN-Habitat (2012) approximated that, between 2010 and 2015, an average of around 200,000 people will be

added to the world’s urban population each day. Worth noting is that 91% of this daily increase (or 183,000) is expected to take place in developing countries (UN-Habitat, 2012) . Approximately 13% of the urban population in developing countries lives in sub-Saharan Africa but the sub-region hosts about 25% of slum population of developing countries (UN-Habitat, 2009) . Again, over 60% of urban population in sub-Saharan Africa lives in slums and unplanned neighborhoods (Fox, 2014) . The annual slum and urban intensification rates are highest in sub-Saharan Africa and the proliferation can be seen as a consequence of disjointed modernization (Fox, 2014) . The fundamental ingredient to the multidimensional structural transformation of low-income rural societies to urban centres is to undergo modernization through the flow of ideas (Lucas, 2004) . However, in Africa the trend is characterized by rapid urban growth occurring in the face of economic stagnation, poor governance, rising unemployment, poor agricultural performance, financially weak municipal authorities and the absence of coherent urban planning policy (Cheru, 2005; Annez et al., 2010) . Under such conditions, including state retrenchment, currency devaluation, and structural adjustment, “… rapid urban growth has been an inevitable recipe for the mass production of slums” (Davis, 2004: p. 11) . Slum is the recognizable frame through which the cities of the global South are perceived and understood (Nuttall & Mbembe, 2005) .

Slum neighborhoods are often associated with an unsustainable informal sector with human lifestyles and consumerism that lead to the modification of city landscapes, urban systems, loss of biodiversity, climate change, urbanization of poverty and lack of social services (Grimm et al., 2008; Stren & Halfani, 2001; World Bank, 2009; Seto et al., 2012; Weisz & Steinberger, 2010) . The drive towards sustainability of neighborhoods has recognized the role of urban planning, yet, most urbanization processes and urban forms are considered unsustainable (Desai, 2008; Alberti et al., 2007; Wu, 2009; Williams et al., 2010; Jones et al., 2009) . Most have attributed it to mass failure of urban governance (Faguet, 2012; Gulyani & Talukdar, 2008) , others comprehend it within the framework of institutional crisis (UN-Habitat, 2003; World Bank, 2009) and yet some traced it to colonialism and proliferation of neoliberal policies (Fox, 2014; Lange 2004; Davis, 2006) . The resultant effects are observed in the wide spread of urban vulnerability, poverty, and the struggle for sustainable livelihoods.

Slum dwellers in the midst of their precarious socio-economic and environmental situations, adapt various coping strategies so as to earn a living. In most cases, coping strategies adopted by slum dealers are unsustainable, in that, they are illegal and/or short-term measures (Essamuah & Tonah, 2004) . In quest for urban sustainability, understanding the knowledge on the coping strategies of slum dwellers, particularly within various environmental, social and economic contexts can contribute tremendously to the design or redesign of projects. However, fewer studies have explored holistically, social, economic and environmental vulnerabilities and coping strategies that slum dwellers adopt in the face of their multifaceted urban challenges, particularly in semi-arid regions.

To the best of our knowledge, this paper is among the few that address sustainability issues of small or secondary cities in semi arid regions of sub-Saharan Africa from the perspective of slums. Contextualising slums within the purview of semi-arid regions are scarce. Out of 12 cities considered as having weak urban prosperity in the World Cities Report 2012/2013 (UN-Habitat, 2012) , nine of them fall under arid and semi-arid regions. In another perspective, 10 of the 12 most drought-vulnerable countries are located in Africa (UN-Habitat, 2014) . Empirical and theoretical contributions to semi arid literature have focused mainly, but not exclusively, on rural vulnerability, climate change, agriculture, rural livelihood, pastoralism and peasantry (Bird & Shepherd, 2003; Slegers, 2008; Biamah, 2005; Lioubimtseva & Henebry, 2009; Lioubimtseva et al., 2008; Tsegaye et al., 2013; Berhanu et al., 2007; Tsegaye et al., 2009; Frost et al., 2007; Ulrich et al., 2012) . There are fewer contributions from the perspective of slums in small cities of semi arid regions of sub-Saharan Africa (e.g. Thys et al., 2005; Deelstra & Girardet, 2000 ). Whereas African cities have high urban risks, institutional fragility, political turbulences, governance failures and high proportion of slums (UN-Habitat, 2014) , the environmental adversaries of those in arid and semi-arid regions bring additional burdens, deepened vulnerability and livelihood challenges.

A focus on sustainability challenges and coping strategies represents a particular lens through which competing urban challenges can be analysed. There is a noteworthy absence of studies on vulnerability and sustainability related to the urban context of semi-arid interior cities in West Africa. Most recent studies on the relationship between urban sustainability and vulnerability in West Africa have focused on a few large coastal cities like Dakar, Accra, and Lagos (e.g. Ajibade & McBean, 2014; Appeaning Addo, 2013; Essamuah & Tonah, 2004 ). With the adoption of a recent national urban policy by Ghana, there are directives on management, climate change adaptation and mitigation in coastal cities and forest belt (Ghana, 2012) , yet the policy failed to give due consideration to semi-arid cities. The lack of an urban focus in the semi-arid region is an important gap given the growing importance that smaller and secondary cities will play in the urban growth trajectories in the next several decades (de Noronha & Vaz, 2015) . This research therefore seeks to demonstrate the vulnerability of slum dwellers under the three pillars of sustainable development, and the coping strategies within close neighbourhoods in the Wa Municipality of Ghana.

Slums: A Literature Review

It is difficult to unearth a general definition for “slum” as a concept, construct, term, or even a theory. While crisis and catastrophe justifies the theoretical exploration of slums, there is an equally epistemological discussion focusing on the persistence of these forms of habitation through which marginalized populations are substantiating their presence in cities across the world (see Simone, 2004, 2010 ). With its emergence in the 1820s, the poorest quality housing and the most unhygienic conditions characterized slums (Lemma, 2005) . In the 19th century, slum was seen as any street, alley or court that is crowded in a town or city (Friedman, 1968) . Others have viewed slums as “place of slumber” (Dennis, 2004: p. 235) , “home of the poor and stranger” (Stokes, 1962: p. 188) and “synonymous with racket” (Prunty, 1998: p. 2) . Urban slums are generally classified as one of the world’s most life threatening settlements (Pietro et al., 2005) . Some treat slum as a systematic and orderly organized area located in an environmentally deteriorated place (Desai & Devadas, 1990) . The term “slum” not only suggests indecent and miserable living conditions but also implies other important aspects such as informality (World Bank/UNCHS, 2000) . Though there exist ongoing epistemological discussion regarding slum, people living under these conditions are often called “slum dwellers” (d’Cruz & Satterthwaite, 2005) .

Rapid urbanization and globalization created the necessary preconditions for slums to be viewed as “touristic transit” with obvious examples in Soweto town of Johannesburg and Rocinha fevela of Rio de Janeiro (Freire- Medeiros, 2009) . Previous studies on the emergence of slums have raised many issues such as social networking, housing failure, governance, migration, globalization, formality, territorial logic of neoliberalism, spatial dispossession, zones of exceptions, right to produce and use space as well as right to city (Obudho & Aduwo, 1989; Lefebvre, 1996; Smith, 1996; Ali & Toran, 2004; Davis, 2004; Harvey, 2005; Nuttall & Mbembe, 2005; Ong, 2006; Choguill, 2007; Akter, 2008; Harvey, 2008; Annez et al., 2010; Butala et al., 2010; Arimah, 2011; Roy, 2011; Firdaus, 2012) . Although these studies have fostered an understanding of the political, economic, social and historical factors associated with slums, there exist no consensus on the definition of slum and fixed solutions. New perspectives call for redefinition of slums through the lens of environment, social and economic factors but context specific (Pugalis et al., 2014; Khalifa, 2011) . Khalifa (2011) recommends two definitions “unplanned” and “unsafe”. There are possibilities of where institutional and implementation failures can make a planned area unsafe.

UN-Habitat defines slum as “an area that has, to various degrees, these features (limited to the physical and legal features of the settlement, and neglecting the complicated collective dimensions): inadequate access to safe and secure water, insufficient sanitation and other related infrastructure, poor structural quality of houses, congestion, and insecure residential status” (UN-Habitat, 2003: p. 12) . These features suggest ill health, diffusion of diseases, infant mortality, juvenile delinquency and crime that injuriously affect the whole area, constituting a threat to public health, welfare, safety and morals of the residents. Such settlements have emerged due to the inability of conventional housing markets to cope with the demand created by rapid urbanization (Johnston et al., 2000; Clark, 2003) . In order to achieve target 7d of the MDGs, the UN-Habitat (2003) adopted five indicators used in defining slum households that are quantifiable. The UN Habitat’s definition does not differentiate between or prioritize the five shelter deprivations according to the risk posed to peoples’ lives, types of shelter deprivation and the degree or magnitude of the deprivations (Khalifa, 2011) . The UN-Habitat’s measurement of slum neglects local realities, as the severity might not be in numbers of households affected but the depth of the lack of access to social services. Secondly, slums might not necessarily occur in only urban areas as peri-urban development without proper social services and facilities could be classified as slums. It has also failed to recognise that some slums are formal and others informal but gives extreme focus on legality and vulnerability (Alemayehu, 2008; Pugalis et al., 2014) . The UN-Habitat’s (2003) definition falls within the purview of utilitarian ideology in which action takes place when greater numbers are affected. For instance, Cities Alliance’s choice of measurement of progress is based on the proportion of people with access to improved sanitation and those with access to secure tenure (World Bank/UNCHS, 2000) . If these two are the benchmarks, the rationale as to why the word “slum” is used makes the term a construct (Ahmed, 2014) . Cruz (2005) refers to it as a political equator.

Bolay (2006) narrates the position regarding the creation of slums. According to him, rapid urbanization while paving the way for prosperity has also been responsible for the creation of slums, degeneration of human society and it is the base for its enhancing character. In the present day world, especially in developing countries, the growth of slums is usually parallel to the growth of urbanization. In the Planet of Slum, Davis (2006) attributes the rapid emergence of slums to capitalism and neoliberal policies that allowed for mass migration during industrialisation in developing countries. Mike Davis argues that urbanisation and industrialisation coupled with rural poverty are the leading causes of the emergence of slums. Contrary to this opinion, Angotti (2006) is sceptical of rural poverty as a cause of mass migration, since rural poverty is better off than urban poverty. A recent review by Fox (2014) argues that correlation of incidence does not explain convincingly the scale and diversity of slums. The variations in colonial investment in Africa as well as the institutional developments correlate with contemporary incidence of slums (Fox, 2014) .

Slums in African cities develop because of a combination of rapid rural-to-urban migration, increasing urban poverty and inequality (UN-Habitat, 2003) , marginalization of poor neighbourhoods and the urban poor’s lack of access to affordable land for housing (Bolay, 2006) . Insufficient investment in new low-income housing and poor maintenance of existing housing and inconsistent urban planning policies are also factors (Cheru, 2005) . The failure of urban governance is seen as a key factor that leads to slum development (Fox, 2014) . This is a reflection of the general failure in many African countries, whether welfare-oriented or market-based. A major reason for the existence and continuing growth of slums in African cities is the lack of effective policies on housing and urban problems (Berger, 2006) .

In Ghana some scholars attribute the emergence of slums to the structural adjustment programme that created the preconditions for urbanisation of cities (Konadu-Agyemang, 2001) . Some attribute it to government failure to profile and private sector failure to provide adequate housing, secured tenures and reduce rural-urban migration (Mahama & Adarkwah, 2006; Owusu et al., 2008; Owusu, 2008; Nsiah-Gyabaah, 2009; Owusu, 2010) . Like other slum neighbourhoods in developing countries, slum dwellers in Ghana adopt a multiple of strategies to cope with livelihood. Essamuah and Tonah (2004) outline detail strategies of coping strategies in their analysis of the coping strategies of the urban poor in Nima, a slum neighbourhood in Accra. Policy measures aimed at addressing slums since 1950 chronologically include laissez-Faire Attitude (1950-1960s), Site and Service Schemes (1970s), Upgrading Strategies (1980s), Security of Tenure (1990s) and Cities without Slums (2000s) (Sietchiping, 2005) . Until recent time 2012, Ghana did not have an urban policy. In 2012, the first national urban policy was adopted as a renewed commitment to the urban challenges in Ghana. In 2010, about 40% of urban population live in slum and the figure is extrapolated to 6,427,000 people by the end of 2017 (Ahmed, 2014) . If these are to be successfully supplied, approximately 3123 new rooms must be completed in every day from now until 2017 when the policy action plan will end.

2. Methodology

2.1. Study Area

The Wa Municipality is one of the eleven districts that make up the Upper West Region of Ghana. It shares administrative boundaries with Nadowli District to the North; the Wa East District to the East and South; and Wa West District to the West and South. It lies within latitudes 1˚40'N to 2˚45'N and longitudes 9˚32' to 10˚20'W (Figure 1). In 2010, the total population of the municipality was 127,284 (Ghana Statistical Service, 2012) . Research on the level of aridity is scarce, but generally, the entire Upper West Region including the Wa Municipality is located in the tropical continental or interior savannah climate zone (Dickson & Benneh, 1988; Walker, 1962; Duadze, 2004) , which is a type of semi-arid climate (Walker, 1962) . Wa is characterized by alternating dry and wet seasons with tropical continental air, tropical maritime and Equatorial Easterly masses (Dickson & Benneh, 1988) . Secondary data sourced from the University of Oklahoma Rain Watch indicates that temperatures can rise as high as 40˚C in the months of February and March (see Figure 2 and Figure 3). Wa Municipality has its capital as Wa, a secondary town which also serves as the regional capital of the Upper West Region. It has a landmass area of approximately 234.74 km2, which is about 6.4% of the region.

Figure 1. Location of study area.

Figure 2. Time series of monthly temperature of Wa Township, 2013. Source: Rain Watch (2014) .

Figure 3. Time series of monthly temperature of Wa Township, 2012. Source: Rain Watch (2014) .

The municipality falls within a semi arid region of Ghana where everything seems to be a paradox. More than 80% of the population is engaged in agriculture, yet one in five is food insecure and one in nine children die of malnutrition before the age of five (Nyantakyi-Frimpong & Bezner Kerr, 2015; Ghana Statistical Service, 2013; Biederlack & Rivers, 2009) . This is a region where food crop farmers or subsistence households are the poorest of the poor and suffer most in terms of malnutrition (Nyantakyi-Frimpong & Bezner Kerr, 2015; Biederlack & Rivers, 2009) . Literature has situated the reasons for these predicaments under the ongoing discourse of geographic inequality (Nyantakyi-Frimpong & Bezner Kerr, 2015) . Common empirical reasons include drought, colonialism, and the neoliberal development policies (Nyantakyi-Frimpong & Bezner Kerr, 2015; Nyantakyi- Frimpong & Bezner Kerr, 2014; Rademacher-Schulz et al., 2014; Yaro, 2013; Songsore, 2003) .

The Northern Territories of Ghana (now Upper West, Upper East and Northern Regions) which is generally arid and landlocked under the British rule were annexed until 1901 because of limited avenue for export and mineral wealth (Songsore, 2003) . The Territories were rather used as source of labour to the south and people from the north have to move to south to work and pay their colonial taxes. This was the genesis of the current persistent migration between the north and south of Ghana even in modern times (Rademacher-Schulz et al., 2014) . Post-colonail policies also adopted regional biases left over the colonial masters, which reinforced regional inequalities as the north was neglected from government investment because of it natural resource endowments, limited transportation and market (Songsore, 2003; Yaro, 2013) . The effects are still manifested in the semi arid region of Ghana and Fox’s (2014) tracing of the emergence of slum to colonialism is of relevance to this area.

It has 51 neighbourhoods forming the Wa Township. Jengbayiri, Dondoli and Tagirayiri, which are among the low class residential areas, were selected for various reasons. First, these neighbourhoods either shares boundary with the Central Business District (CBD) or are located in proximity to it, and thus exhibits fundamental characteristics of low class residential areas. Second, Jengbayiri, Dondoli and Tagirayiri can best be described as slum settlements, in that, they are characterized by unplanned developments, high poverty levels, poor access to social services and infrastructure, poor housing conditions, among others. Third, the selected neighbourhoods have high population density and unique land tenure characteristics (see Table 1) given that some inhabitants are early settlers since the 20th century with secured land tenure (Wilks, 1989) .

2.2. Methods

In this study, primary and secondary data are both integrated. The study includes both qualitative and quantita- tive materials gathered from the administration of questionnaires, literature review and direct observations.

Table 1. Population and land tenure characteristics of selected neighbourhoods.

Through an urban sustainability lens, data was collected, using questionnaires, on three dimensions namely: social, economic and environmental. A semi-structured questionnaire was used to collect data at the various selected communities. An initial visit to the selected areas was undertaken to introduce and familiarize with the inhabitants as well as seek their consent for the study. In all 371 heads of households responded to the questionnaire administration. In the selected areas, households were questioned on the coping mechanisms and frequency of adopting a particular strategy. Observation was used to assess the evidence on the ground on the ground through field visits. For instance, observations were made of how neighbourhoods related to livelihood activities.

Ten of the surveyed placed-based vulnerability criteria were considered for vulnerability analysis. These broadly include social (literacy rate and service availability), economic (consumption and income) and environmental (living space, housing durability, water, bath house, toilet facility and refuse disposal). To understand the service availability in neighbourhoods, a settlement functional matrix was first developed using a scalogram analysis. The selected areas are ranked using centrality scores obtained based on population, access and availability of social services. A Spatial Multi-Criteria Evaluation (SMCE) module in ILWIS (Integrated Land and Water Information Management System) was used to aggregate the effects of the criteria for each neighbourhood to obtain a graduated colour map with values showing the overall vulnerability of each neighbourhood and also for the three broad sustainability dimensions―social, economic and environmental.

3. Results

3.1. Demographic and Socio-Economic Characteristics

There are some significant variations, especially in income, expenditure, literacy and household headship, among slum neighbourhoods. In terms of female headship, Tagirayiri has more than the other selected neighbourhoods. This research shows that in female-headed households, income levels are higher as well as expenditure and literacy levels than in male headed households. Few female-headed households are living in temporary structures for the selected areas considered. In the urban area of the semi-arid region, most people (42% of respondents) are into trading and other than agricultural based livelihood activities. The strategic location of the centre makes it a hub and a transit point to and from neighbouring country―Burkina Faso. The slum areas are predominantly Muslims with high levels of polygamy and, instead of men taking care of the family, the wives are left to work hard and compete among themselves for favours from their husbands (Bashiru, 2012) . Masinde (2014) recalls this in the Kenyan slums that most males are now abandoning their responsibilities to their wives. Polygamy in itself has become a coping strategy for these predominantly Muslim slum communities studied.

3.2. Vulnerability and Placed-Based Context

Approaching slums through a placed-based lens (Table 2), shows the various placed-based characteristics. The placed features are grouped under themes of social, environmental and economic dimensions with summary analysis. Socially, slum dwellers of the selected areas have long years of placed attachment with their environments (over 68% lived there for the past 16 years) with secured land tenures as early settlers. This contradicts with the stereotype that slums are places for the strangers (e.g. Stokes, 1962; Prunty, 1998 ). Whereas there is a surge of new entrants, they mostly come on the basis of social networks. There are also observed low levels of engagement with organized clubs (social and sports clubs) as well as less preference for civil organizations for reasons of corruption and bureaucracies. These findings are similar to Pugalis et al. (2014) in the case of Kpirikpiri-Nigeria. Economically, the conditions reported (see Table 2) in terms of proportion of people in the informal sector, unskilled, unemployed and literacy are similar to most studies on slums in developing countries.

Table 2. Selected placed-based characteristics of heads of households.

Environmentally, high room occupancy rates, lack of improved sanitation and poor housing conditions are similar to other studies on slums. However, over 29% of the households do not have access to potable water and rely on vendors who are irregular in supply but charge higher prices. Those who depend on pipe connections are particularly vulnerable to irregular water flow and the long distance they cover to have access to pipe water. The critical changes of groundwater discharge in semi-arid regions (see Scanlon et al., 2006 ) affects access to water in the selected areas. Access to surface water in the Wa Municipality is limited because of the low levels of precipitation and existing water suppliers (Ghana Water Company, vendors) rely on groundwater (see Figure 2 and Figure 3 for rainfall). The over 12% of households depending on urban and peri-urban agriculture are also vulnerable to the climate variability of their environment.

3.3. Variations in Vulnerability among Slum Neighbourhoods

Area/neighbourhood based analysis of vulnerability can be used to identify spatial concentration of particular population groups with different policy/project requirements (Pacione, 2005) . Table 3 contains details of the measurement and effects of each criterion across neighbourhoods. The variations in access to social services are also shown in Table 4. The standard deviation ranges from 0.6 for living space to as high as 604.8 for service availability. The variation in the effects of neighbourhoods for each criterion suggests that the level of vulnerability of slum neighbourhoods, even at criteria level, varies.

In the context of this study, a composite index of zero (0) represents high vulnerability while one (1) represents less vulnerability (see legend in Figure 4). The results reveal a variation in the overall vulnerability index of the three slum neighbourhoods (Tagirayiri, Dondoli and Jengbeyir). The overall vulnerability indices of the neighbourhoods are 0.88, 0.75 and 0.70 for Tagirayiri, Dondoli and Jengbeyiri respectively (Figure 4). This implies that among the three neighbourhoods, Tagrayiri is the least vulnerable, followed by Dondoli and lastly Jengbeyir. The vulnerability indices of the three neighbourhoods yield a standard deviation of 0.09, implying that the degree of vulnerability of the three neighbourhoods do not vary significantly. In reference to the three sustainability dimensions, Tagrayiri is equally the least economically and socially vulnerable (see Figure 5). However, concerning the environmental dimension, Tagrayiri is the second most vulnerable neighbourhood (see Figure 4 and Figure 5). In general terms, all the selected areas are less environmentally vulnerable relative to social and economic vulnerabilities. This is because there are fewer socioeconomic opportunities in the area. Agriculture is limited because of the erratic rainfall patterns and businesses are few. Between social and economic vulnerabilities, there are more social vulnerabilities attributable to the limited availability and access to basic social services such as education and health shown in Table 4. The sustainability challenges therefore lies within the improvement of social and economic choices.

3.4. Households Coping Strategies

There is high level of livelihood diversification among people in Dondoli and Jengbayiri but less in Tagirayiri because the high female household headship comes with significant savings for such households. Tagirayiri also is less vulnerable as shown in Figure 4 and Figure 5. A female respondent in Dondoli recalls the volatility:

Figure 4. Overall vulnerability indices of slum neighbourhoods’ in question.

Figure 5. Vulnerability indices of slum neighbourhoods in relation to sustainability dimensions. (a) Environmental vulnerability index; (b) Economic vulnerability index; (c) Social vulnerability index.

Table 3. Effects of each of the three slum neighbourhoods in relation to 10 livelihood criteria.

Table 4. Scalogram analysis.

“I have changed my business three times in the last two and a half years. I used to sell secondhand clothing, and later changed to vegetables and now I am into bread selling. I have moved from these businesses due to changes in seasonal demands induced by our environment” (A respondent, 24-11-2014).

A cross classification of gender of household headship against the coping strategies show that more female headed households save more and rely less on constant diversifications. There is more fragility in the study areas given time given that about 151 households report “often” in the use of a particular strategy. In all the selected areas, autonomous coping strategies are higher than access to planned adaption by local government and NGOs. Whereas many (50%) are members of political party ba6sed groups, interventions are given on individual bases. There is also more dependence on remittance in Dondoli than other selected areas. The results show that there are significant variations among slum neighbourhoods located within the same inner city with similar environmental conditions. This confirms the diversity in slums as reported in other studies (e.g. Boyagoda, 2014 ). From this study, the variations are because of differences in availability and access to social services, access to land, linkage with political structures and social networks.

4. Discussion

Though this study shows that, in terms of non-climatic environmental factors, the selected areas are not generally vulnerable, the existence of poor access to improved sanitation, inadequate access to potable water and congestion in rooms make the areas vulnerable to climate sensitive diseases. Through a lens of semi-aridity, slum dwellers in such areas are at high risk given that climate change is one of the major determinants of the incidence of climate-sensitive diseases. A large proportion (50%) of Ghana’s health burden is caused by climate-sensitive diseases such a meningitis, diarrhoea and malaria in northern Ghana (UNDP, 2010) where the landscape generally is arid or semi-arid. Research on slums should be contextualised in terms of socioeconomic and environmental realities other than generalised indicators of slums. Using diverse socioeconomic and environmental indicators could help understand the important factors in designing any intervention. It also shows where interventions must first be targeted. For example, the study shows that social and economic vulnerabilities must first be addressed before environmental vulnerabilities for these selected places.

The limited access to planned intervention reflects two important gaps. Firstly, the lack of urban focus in semi arid regions in terms of vulnerability research, limited intervention by city authorities and planning. Secondly, it also shows the governance failures in addressing urban challenges in semi arid regions. Whereas, the Upper West Region of Ghana is noted to have many NGOs addressing different vulnerabilities, their presence in terms of planned intervention is not felt in the urban setting. Planned intervention could serve as a platform for engagement among different governance actors. However, limited planned intervention reduces the realm of urban governance in the semi arid region. The issue of governance failure, as a key challenge to the mergence and perpetuation of vulnerabilities, is noted by other studies (Cheru, 2005; Bolay, 2006; Firdaus, 2012) .

That notwithstanding, there are also much diversity among and within slum neighbourhoods in terms of use of coping strategies. The proportion of unskilled (22%) does not have the capacity to afford training without access to planned intervention. With the broader skill, literacy and higher rate of diversification of livelihoods activities of some slum neighbourhoods, we argue that the major barriers are limited opportunities in labour markets, access to planned intervention and adversaries of their environment. The argument seeks to support STWR’s (2010) opinion that slum dwellers are not actually a burden on urban population. In other perspectives, slums could be dynamic resources and source of urban resilience given the level of diversity in skills within and among neighbourhoods. Since the climate variability in semi-arid regions cannot be changed within a short time, efficiency of localised skills could be a focal point in addressing the vulnerability of slum dwellers. The nature of Wa Township’s environment makes livelihood strategies more on nature of gamble than of calculated expectations (Wilks, 1989) . As a necessity for survival, slum dwellers in semi-arid areas, considered under this study, have entrepreneurial spirits to address the challenges of their environment.

The findings confirm other studies in Latin America (Arias & Palloni, 2006) and in Africa (Masinde, 2014; Koster, 2008) where the role of female household headship has significance in poverty reduction. The results also falls within the ongoing discourse of feminisation of poverty and household headship by empirically reporting the contrary-female-headed households are not the poorest of the poor as represented by others (e.g. Chant, 1997 ). The results further suggest that development interventions in slums of semi-arid areas of Ghana should not only target female-headed households, but male-headed households as well who are increasingly becoming vulnerable and poor. For example, after the Rwanda genocide, land and livestock were distributed to only female-headed households by relief agencies (Koster, 2008) . Gendering the political economy of urbanisation in semi-arid regions could put limitations in a lens in which poverty and vulnerability can be addressed given that both male and female-headed households have dependants who are exposed to similar environmental conditions. Recognising the diversity within the rich-poor continuum of heads of households, there is no need to have a separate policy intervention for only female or male-headed households.

In the semi-arid region and per this study, we expect a radical difference from the existing space-based narrative (urban upgrading), which for years has been advocated and implemented in other slums. The existing narrative focused extremely on infrastructural fix as a solution to the predicaments of slum dwellers given that most case interventions are blind to the spatial context (Pugalis et al., 2014) . This could only be fairly beneficial to slum dwellers in semi-arid regions under the environmental conditions within which they live. In this vein, the IPCC (2012) cautioned the need to adapt urban infrastructure to localised extreme climatic events. Existing measure of sustainability in slum upgrading focuses extremely on continuity of projects (Imparato & Ruster, 2003) and hardly integrates local environmental conditions such as temperature and rainfall. A move away from “area-based” towards “place” could give temporal dimension to planned and autonomous interventions. Even under the purview, due consideration must be given to local realities and the participation of minorities as Bulkeley and Broto (2013) found that purposive climate change interventions in global cities create new forms of political space through technical interventions.

5. Conclusion

The paper addresses the vulnerability context and coping strategies of slum dwellers in semi-arid environments. It shows that there is a surge in female-headed households in the study area attributable to the place-based context, such as religion and culture. Many households have a wider range of livelihood activities to cope with the adversaries of their environment. Many households have placed attachment to their environment for over 16 years and their coping strategies are driven by autonomous interventions other than planned interventions. There are also diversities within the neighbourhoods studied in terms of literacy, income, expenditure, headship, skills, coping strategies and availability of social services attributable to existing inequalities in opportunities. Slums are always branded as problematic other than an opportunity to utilise these diversities. The state of the World Cities Report 2012/2013 adopted city prosperity as an essential and necessary concept to urban development urban dwellers pursue satisfaction, maximize utility, and happiness (UN-Habitat, 2012) . However, in the midst of vulnerabilities in semi-arid slums, the adversaries of the environment challenge the successful flourishing and thriving conditions. These observations suggest that the identification of place-based capabilities, opportunities and localised constraints could serve as basis for designing of an appropriate planned intervention. People-based and placed-based strategies should be the leading approaches to designing interventions in slum neighbourhoods of semi-arid regions as they are locally tailored and endogenous. The vulnerabilities of semi-arid cities require transforming urban livelihoods through sustained innovative place-based urban development strategies. This study has been able to show that, even among slum neighbourhoods, the overall degree of vulnerability varies which represent a dynamic resource for urban resilience. For planning purposes, area-based analysis of slum neighbourhoods can help in the identification of highly vulnerable areas for interventions. However, improving urban resilience and sustainability requires a system approach to the three dimensions of vulnerability assessed. From the selected cases, the sustainability challenge has to do with the social and economic dimensions rather than environmental concerns. Due consideration must be given to the provision of socioeconomic opportunities through planned interventions. The sustainability challenges therefore lies within the improvement of social and economic choices.

NOTES

*Corresponding author.

Conflicts of Interest

The authors declare no conflicts of interest.

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