DIRTY, SACRED RIVERS: CONFRONTING SOUTH ASIA’S WATER CRISIS

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DIRTY, SACRED RIVERS: CONFRONTING SOUTH ASIA’S WATER CRISIS (ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE PROJECT TOPICS AND MATERIALS)

 

 

CHAPTER ONE

INTRODUCTION

1.1    BACKGROUND OF THE STUDY

Housing is an integral part of human settlement that fulfils basic need and has a profound impact on the quality of life, health, welfare as well as productivity of man. It plays a crucial role in integrated physical and economic development, environmental sustainability, natural disaster mitigation and employment generation as well as wealth creation (Erguden, 2001; Boehm and Schlottmann, 2001; UN-HABITAT, 2006a).

The desire for adequate and affordable housing also has strong links to the need for security, safety and proper socio-economic status of individuals and communities. In spite of this widely acknowledged importance of housing and various efforts in making adequate and affordable housing available to majority of people, a large proportion of urban residents in less developed countries do not have access to decent housing at affordable cost (Tipple,2004; 2006; UN-HABITAT, 2006a; Greene and Rojas, 2008).

As a result, most urban residents in Developing Countries live in housing conditions that constitute an affront to human dignity and which comes with appalling social, economic, spatial and health implications (Rondinelli, 1990; Cotton and Tayler, 1994; Opara, 2003; UN-HABITAT, 2006d; Coker et al., 2007; UNFPA, 2007). Hence, inadequate housing condition has become an intractable challenge that has continued to receive attention from governments and individuals in many developing countries.

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DIRTY, SACRED RIVERS: CONFRONTING SOUTH ASIA’S WATER CRISIS (ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE PROJECT TOPICS AND MATERIALS)

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