Friday, July 23, 2010

Sustainable Habitats in India

Summer School , April 5th to April 23rd 2010 in Mumbai, India






In the framework of his phd at the habitat unit of the technical university in Berlin Martin Schwegmann from urban passion was invited to the summer school and gained substantial insides into (informal) urban dynamics of Mumbai and a bit of India.


About the summer school: 

 The German Technical Cooperation (GTZ) and the German Academic Exchange Service (DAAD) in cooperation with the School of Habitat Studies of the Tata Institute of Social Sciences (TISS) were holding a 3-week Summer School on Sustainable Habitats in India. The participants were supposed to explore the emergence and consolidation of shanty towns in Mumbai.






Based on its innovative peer-learning approach, the GTZ-DAAD-Summer School participants from all over India, Germany, China, Indonesia and Chile were working together on the concept of sustainable urban development, its approach and possible implementation in the context of slums in Mumbai. “Sustainable Habitats in India” is part of the UN-Decade ‘Education for Sustainable Development’ (ESD)-project, and inspired by “Between Lecture Hall & Project Works”, GTZ-Berlin. This Summer School in India was the sixth within this framework after Vietnam, Egypt, Brazil, Peru and India. It focussed on strengthening sustainable links between researchers, civil society, businesspeople, policy makers and development practitioners as well as strengthening the scientific and institutional exchange between the involved parties from India and Germany.

The three-week program was concentrating on the following thematic areas being researched in 4 different slums in Mumbai:

• Livelihoods, Housing and Infrastructure
• Planning and Governance
• Sustainability of Urban Habitats

In the first week, the political framework, state-of-the-art methods such as action research and peer-learning techniques were introduced. In the end of the week, team work at four different research sites were initiated.

In the second week, participants continued to carry out action research in new and old shantytowns in Mumbai and started to discuss their findings with experts from different fields and perspectives in learning-dialogues.

During the third and final week, further learning-dialogues, amongst others with leading German scientists,  concluded in the presentation of the results in a public symposium on April 23rd at the auditorium of TISS.

Some leading questions to start with were:
• Who is holding the power to guarantee the elaboration and implementation of the necessary innovations to manage the most urging questions of sustainable urban development?
• Which are the pathways towards political implementation and social consensus?
• Which unknown perspectives and sustainable surviving strategies we could learn from shanty towns?
• Me personally: Are there any innovative experiences I could contribute?

In the framework of his phd at the habitat unit of the technical university in Berlin Martin Schwegmann from urban passion was invited to the summer school and gained substantial insides into (informal) urban dynamics of Mumbai and a bit of India.






During the summerschool a film team from the pubic german television ZDF followed the summer school participants in their research. The resulting reportage about  water supply problematics can be seen here:

ZDF Reportage: "Kampf um den letzten Tropfen"  (fight for the last drop - only in german)


still from the reportage (martin schwegmann, rangvir singh) 







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