Type | Conference Paper - 46th ISOCARP Congress 2010 |
Title | The Challenges of Sustainable Land Use Planning In Nigerian Cities. The Case of Port Harcourt |
Author(s) | |
Publication (Day/Month/Year) | 2010 |
URL | http://www.isocarp.net/data/case_studies/1740.pdf |
Abstract | In many developing countries, effective and efficient land use planning and management is not well established. The most patent manifestation of this is the chaotic state of land use activities in the cities. The physical, economic and social conditions of the African city has been well documented (UNHABITAT, 2008). Rapid rates of urbanization have resulted in unplanned and unregulated growth. Millions of Africa’s urban dwellers live in poverty in sub – standard housing and degraded environments. Much has been written highlighting the underlying factors to which this state of affairs can be attributed (Nwaka, 2005; Oyesiku 2009, Mabogunje, 2002). In almost all African countries have a history of land use planning processes dating back to the respective periods of colonial rule. Land use or physical planning has been described as a process aimed at achieving orderly physical development with the overall aim of evolving a functional and liveable environment where individual and common goals can be achieved. In urban centres, the essence of land use planning is to ensure that urban activities are organized and developed in physical space with due consideration for the protection of the public interest which include health, safety, convenience, efficiency, energy conservation, environmental quality, social equity, social choice and amenity (Adeagbo, 1998; Nnah et al, 2007). These are also features of sustainable development. The United Nations Conference on Environment and Development (1992) included sustainable land use planning as are of the eight programme areas of Agenda 21. The objective of the programme area is to provide for the land requirements of human settlement development through environmentally sound physical planning and land use so as to ensure access to land to all households. Oyesiku (2009) argued that planning practice in Nigeria was not creating spatially sustainable new settlement and cites because planning is like preventative medicine whereas professional planners in the country have spent the last generation focusing on curative medicine. Ogu and Adeniji (1998) observe that the extent to which human communities both urban and rural, but particularly the urban, are sustainable may well depend on the management of such settlements. Land use planning is a key component of urban management. Urban sustainability is directly influenced by land use controls which ensure efficient use is made of urban land. Significantly, the acquisition and development of land is the basis of physical growth. The development control process is subject to plans, regulations and laws. The manifest ineffectiveness of the control processes in Nigerian cities derives to a large extent from the planning, the regulatory and administrative frameworks within which physical development takes place. However, a principal underlying problem for effectively administering land use is the land itself. Planned city expansion in Port Harcourt and other cities across the country is encountering problems. At the centre of this problematic are the questions of who has access to land, how such land is acquired, and what laws exist for regulating land use. For all cities in Nigeria, there is the land question; arguably the most fundamental to be resolved if planning is to have any solid foundation. Not even the Federal government has been able to resolve these. Owei, Obinna & Ede, The Challenges of Sustainable Land Use Planning in Nigerian Cities: the Case of Port Harcourt. 46th ISOCARP Congress 2010 |
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