Promoting urban poverty reduction: Lessons from Uganda

This breifing includes a look at the Transforming Settlements of the Urban Poor programme

Abstract

Uganda has one of the highest urban growth rates in the world. An estimated 60 percent of Uganda’s urban population lives in informal settlements with a lack of access to tenure security, decent housing and basic services. This urban poverty has been reduced through the Transforming Settlements of the Urban Poor (TSUPU) programme. TSUPU has transformed relationships between local-level officials and the urban poor through the co-production of services and new participatory governance spaces called Municipal Development Forums. These new partnerships between local governments and the urban poor have been embedded into policy and practice through coalitional working between donor agencies, transnational social movements, government, civil society and the organised urban poor.

This output was funded under the Effective States and Inclusive Development Research Centre programme

Citation

ESID (2016 ) Promoting urban poverty reduction: Lessons from Uganda. Manchester: The University of Manchester, 4p

Promoting urban poverty reduction: Lessons from Uganda

Updates to this page

Published 5 December 2016