05 November 2011

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A Framework for Understanding and Action in Metropolitan Regions
This document is aimed at a broad range of development
and environmental professionals, civic society groups, staff in training
institutions and aid agencies, politicians and other decision-makers at
the local, metropolitan and national levels. This diverse range of
actors reflects the complexity and scale of the problems associated with
the interactions between urban and rural areas and the diversity of the
people and productive activities in what is here
described as the 'peri-urban interface'.
Authors:
Adriana Allen
Juilo Davila
Pascale Hofmann
Publication Date: May 2006
ISBN: 1 87450-60 9.
This document offers a conceptual and practical tool for those involved directly or
indirectly
in the long-term planning and daily management of basic service
provision in the metropolitan regions of developing countries. Its
long-term aim is to contribute to a more reliable, affordable and
sustainable access to water and sanitation services for the diverse and
often-growing poor peri-urban populations in metropolitan regions.
The focus of this document is not on the technical aspects of designing and building infrastructure.
Rather, it seeks to provide guidance to better comprehend the
institutional and governance challenges of improving access to these
basic services for poor peri-urban households and small-scale
enterprises.
Without denying the crucial role played by municipal engineers and other technical water
and sanitation staff, improved and reliable access to peri-urban water
and sanitation services will not result from their isolated - and
sometimes heroic - actions. Similarly, experience shows that access by
poor residents and producers is unlikely to expand if left in the hands
of private suppliers alone. Implementation of policies and plans that
respond more effectively to peri-urban realities requires a better
understanding of issues such as the inadequate peri-urban coverage of
these services and the high presence of diverse formal and informal
suppliers of basic services found in many cities. This challenge is all
the more urgent in the context of the rapid pace that is a feature of
peri-urban change, of the obvious fragmentation of government
responsibilities for planning and supplying basic services to peri-urban
areas and of the crucial environmental functions played by these areas.