Type | Working Paper |
Title | A Spatial Multiple Criteria approach for poverty eradication planning |
Author(s) | |
Publication (Day/Month/Year) | |
URL | http://www.africageoproceedings.org.za/wp-content/uploads/2014/06/21_Daniels_Smit.pdf |
Abstract | Poverty eradication as a policy issue has received significant attention since the promulgation of the South African National Development Plan (NDP). The NDP envisages that by 2030 income poverty should be eradicated. To do this government must accurately target their interventions ensuring that the intended population benefits from the actual poverty eradication intervention. With the evolution of systems and processes in the Science and Technology industry over the past two decades, the integration of GIS and MCDM techniques has achieved encouraging results within different planning domains. This research paper presents a vector – based GIS – MCDM methodology that combines Principal Component Analysis (PCA) and Technique for Order Preference by Similarity to the Ideal Solution (TOPSIS). This integration is facilitated through the use of loose coupling within the ArcGIS 10.2 environment. A case study in the City of Cape Town is used to demonstrate the use of the methodology and how it can be applied to conduct an evaluation study to rank each of the communities based on poverty measures. The results of the GIS – MCDM analysis show that a significant cluster of high levels of poverty existing in the southern part of the City of Cape Town: Khayelitsha, Philippi, Gugulethu, Nyanga ect. Moreover the prominence of apartheid led spatial planning and the resulting socio – economic segregation across the City of Cape Town is still spatially evident across two decades after democracy. Thus the above map can be used by planners and decision makers to inform better decision making by ensuring that the fiscal budgets are targeted at the correct communities thus ensuring that the intended benefit population actually benefit. |
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