About us
Challenge
The United
Nations Millennium Declaration recognises the dire circumstances of the worlds
urban poor. It articulates the commitment of Member States to improve the lives
of at least 100 million slum dwellers by the year 2020 Target 11 of Goal No.7
a task mandated to UN-HABITAT.
As large as
100 million may seem, however, it is only 10 per cent of the present worldwide
slum population, which, if left unchecked, will multiply threefold to 3 billion
by the year 2050. The challenge is made more daunting by the fact that,
according to UN-HABITATs own research, the worlds slum population has already
grown by 75 million in barely three years since the Millennium Declaration.
As our
towns and cities grow at unprecedented rates setting the social, political,
cultural and environmental trends of the world, sustainable urbanisation is one
of the most pressing challenges facing the global community in the 21st
century. In 1950, one-third of the worlds people lived in cities. Just 50
years later, this proportion has risen to one-half and will continue to grow to
two-thirds, or 6 billion people, by 2050. Cities are now home to half of
humankind. They are the hub for much national production and consumption
economic and social processes that generate wealth and opportunity. But they
also create disease, crime, pollution and poverty. In many cities, especially
in developing countries, slum dwellers number more than 50 per cent of the
population and have little or no access to shelter, water, and sanitation. This
is where UN-HABITAT is mandated to make a difference for the better.