The Implications of Indigenous Green Infrastructure for Contemporary Urban Development in Tanzania: The Case of Informal Settlements in the City of Dar es Salaam

Publikation: Bog/antologi/afhandling/rapportPh.d.-afhandlingForskning

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The Implications of Indigenous Green Infrastructure for Contemporary Urban Development in Tanzania : The Case of Informal Settlements in the City of Dar es Salaam. / Mpyanga, Simon Onesmo.

Department of Geosciences and Natural Resource Management, Faculty of Science, University of Copenhagen, 2019. 406 s.

Publikation: Bog/antologi/afhandling/rapportPh.d.-afhandlingForskning

Harvard

Mpyanga, SO 2019, The Implications of Indigenous Green Infrastructure for Contemporary Urban Development in Tanzania: The Case of Informal Settlements in the City of Dar es Salaam. Department of Geosciences and Natural Resource Management, Faculty of Science, University of Copenhagen.

APA

Mpyanga, S. O. (2019). The Implications of Indigenous Green Infrastructure for Contemporary Urban Development in Tanzania: The Case of Informal Settlements in the City of Dar es Salaam. Department of Geosciences and Natural Resource Management, Faculty of Science, University of Copenhagen.

Vancouver

Mpyanga SO. The Implications of Indigenous Green Infrastructure for Contemporary Urban Development in Tanzania: The Case of Informal Settlements in the City of Dar es Salaam. Department of Geosciences and Natural Resource Management, Faculty of Science, University of Copenhagen, 2019. 406 s.

Author

Mpyanga, Simon Onesmo. / The Implications of Indigenous Green Infrastructure for Contemporary Urban Development in Tanzania : The Case of Informal Settlements in the City of Dar es Salaam. Department of Geosciences and Natural Resource Management, Faculty of Science, University of Copenhagen, 2019. 406 s.

Bibtex

@phdthesis{a86787abef8649a09e9755d5c5ae812d,
title = "The Implications of Indigenous Green Infrastructure for Contemporary Urban Development in Tanzania: The Case of Informal Settlements in the City of Dar es Salaam",
abstract = "Many researchers have been conducted, addressing rapid urbanisation in major sub-Saharan African cities. Although the increase in informal settlements and their association to natural landscape and environmental degradation are addressed, the application of rural low-key landscape development and adaptation techniques as measures to impart towards nature based urban informal development is not highlighted. This research was carried out to explore indigenous innate practices in interacting with nature on the slopes of Mt. Kilimanjaro as rural informative case study area. The same was done to investigate residents' techniques and development process in a conformative unplanned settlement of the Mbezi River catchment, in the rapidly growing City of Dar es Salaam. Adopting Case method, both qualitative and quantitative approaches were used for data collection and analysis. Observations, photo registry, sketching, maps studying, literature review, interview and mapping were employed. Relevant materials were applied. It was found that the landscape resilience attained by indigenous nature based development techniques from household level (small scale) to river level (large scale) inter-connectedly were geared by cultural homogeneity. The inconsistency and egoistic techniques by residents in the Mbezi Rive catchment area were underpinned by socio-economic and attitudinal diversities. Lessons extracted from the indigenous practices were transferred to the informal urban development through and established model by this study. The indigenous green infrastructure techniques in development, seems to be a remedial approach to transforming urban development culture, if well integrated in human-land interaction process to ameliorate urban ecosystem and mitigate adverse climatic impacts in the unplanned urban setting. Enforcement of the environmental regulations is primary to natural systems protection if resilient landscape urbanism is to be achieved.",
author = "Mpyanga, {Simon Onesmo}",
year = "2019",
language = "English",
publisher = "Department of Geosciences and Natural Resource Management, Faculty of Science, University of Copenhagen",

}

RIS

TY - BOOK

T1 - The Implications of Indigenous Green Infrastructure for Contemporary Urban Development in Tanzania

T2 - The Case of Informal Settlements in the City of Dar es Salaam

AU - Mpyanga, Simon Onesmo

PY - 2019

Y1 - 2019

N2 - Many researchers have been conducted, addressing rapid urbanisation in major sub-Saharan African cities. Although the increase in informal settlements and their association to natural landscape and environmental degradation are addressed, the application of rural low-key landscape development and adaptation techniques as measures to impart towards nature based urban informal development is not highlighted. This research was carried out to explore indigenous innate practices in interacting with nature on the slopes of Mt. Kilimanjaro as rural informative case study area. The same was done to investigate residents' techniques and development process in a conformative unplanned settlement of the Mbezi River catchment, in the rapidly growing City of Dar es Salaam. Adopting Case method, both qualitative and quantitative approaches were used for data collection and analysis. Observations, photo registry, sketching, maps studying, literature review, interview and mapping were employed. Relevant materials were applied. It was found that the landscape resilience attained by indigenous nature based development techniques from household level (small scale) to river level (large scale) inter-connectedly were geared by cultural homogeneity. The inconsistency and egoistic techniques by residents in the Mbezi Rive catchment area were underpinned by socio-economic and attitudinal diversities. Lessons extracted from the indigenous practices were transferred to the informal urban development through and established model by this study. The indigenous green infrastructure techniques in development, seems to be a remedial approach to transforming urban development culture, if well integrated in human-land interaction process to ameliorate urban ecosystem and mitigate adverse climatic impacts in the unplanned urban setting. Enforcement of the environmental regulations is primary to natural systems protection if resilient landscape urbanism is to be achieved.

AB - Many researchers have been conducted, addressing rapid urbanisation in major sub-Saharan African cities. Although the increase in informal settlements and their association to natural landscape and environmental degradation are addressed, the application of rural low-key landscape development and adaptation techniques as measures to impart towards nature based urban informal development is not highlighted. This research was carried out to explore indigenous innate practices in interacting with nature on the slopes of Mt. Kilimanjaro as rural informative case study area. The same was done to investigate residents' techniques and development process in a conformative unplanned settlement of the Mbezi River catchment, in the rapidly growing City of Dar es Salaam. Adopting Case method, both qualitative and quantitative approaches were used for data collection and analysis. Observations, photo registry, sketching, maps studying, literature review, interview and mapping were employed. Relevant materials were applied. It was found that the landscape resilience attained by indigenous nature based development techniques from household level (small scale) to river level (large scale) inter-connectedly were geared by cultural homogeneity. The inconsistency and egoistic techniques by residents in the Mbezi Rive catchment area were underpinned by socio-economic and attitudinal diversities. Lessons extracted from the indigenous practices were transferred to the informal urban development through and established model by this study. The indigenous green infrastructure techniques in development, seems to be a remedial approach to transforming urban development culture, if well integrated in human-land interaction process to ameliorate urban ecosystem and mitigate adverse climatic impacts in the unplanned urban setting. Enforcement of the environmental regulations is primary to natural systems protection if resilient landscape urbanism is to be achieved.

M3 - Ph.D. thesis

BT - The Implications of Indigenous Green Infrastructure for Contemporary Urban Development in Tanzania

PB - Department of Geosciences and Natural Resource Management, Faculty of Science, University of Copenhagen

ER -

ID: 383091261