Keywords: Nairobi,
Dandora, Low-income Housing, Policy, Site and Service Projects,
African Cities, Third World Cities, Housing Development Department,
Community Level Approach.
Abstract: This
paper is a critical study of recent innovations in institution
development for delivery of low income housing in Third World
Cities. It is based on an evaluation of the Dandora Community
Project in Nairobi, in the wider context of leading policies
of international development agencies.
The Dandora Project was
initiated as an experimental approach in low income housing,
along with a number of similar sites and service projects
in other African and Third World countries. An innovative
feature of the Dandora pin the Nairobi City Council to implement
this self-help project. The Housing Development Department
(HDD) employed community development personnel to work with
residents at neighborhood level.
The study analyses some
of the pitfalls which bedeviled the HDD in the wider political
and administrative environment. The significance of the Nairobi
experience is generalized with reference to recent shifts
which have become apparent in international funding agency
priorities. The authors contend that the case study demonstrates
that the community development approach supported by donors
in the seventies benefits lower income households more than
the private sector approach supported in the seventies.