Shanty town
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Image:Manila shanty.jpg Image:Langa-shack-fire.jpg Image:Shantytown south africa sly.jpg Shanty towns, "marginal" or informal settlements are units of irregular, low-cost dwellings, usually on lands belonging to third parties, and most often located in the periphery of the cities. These dwellings are often assembled in a patch-work fashion from pieces of plywood, corrugated metal, sheets of plastic, and any other material that will provide cover.
Residences are almost always built without a license. They pose a fire hazard and are remarkable by their near total absence of numbered streets, sanitation networks, electricity, or telephones, and even if they do possess such neccessites they are likely to be disorganized, old or inferior. Shanty towns are mostly found in developing nations, or partially developed nations with an unequal distribution of wealth, such as South Africa (where they are often called squatter camps), the Philippines (often called squatter areas), Chile (where they are referred to as poblaciones callampas), Argentina (where they are referred to as villas miseria), Venezuela (where they are known as barrios), Brazil (where slums and shanty towns are known as favelas) and Peru (where they are known as pueblos jóvenes) .In some extreme cases, shanty towns can have populations approaching that of a city. Shanty towns usually have a high rate of crimes, suicides, and diseases.
During the Great Depression of the 1930s, shanty towns appeared in cities across the United States because of the massive unemployment. Some were nicknamed "Hoovervilles" because the residents blamed the economic conditions on then President Herbert Hoover, who did not believe in government interference in an attempt to end the depression.
The first recorded use of the word shanty, as meaning a crude dwelling, occurred in Ohio in 1820. It may have been derived from the French word chantier, meaning a building site. Alternatively, it could have been derived from the Irish sean tigh, meaning "old house" or from the Nahuatl word chantli "home".
Shanty towns are also sometimes called peace towns since shanti means peace in Hindi.
Every country has a name for marginal settlements:
- Asentamientos (settlements) in Guatemala
- Bidonvilles in French-speaking territories
- Cantegriles in Uruguay
- Ciudades perdidas (lost cities) in Mexico City, Mexico
- Colonias along the Mexican-American border
- Favelas in Brazil
- Gecekondu in Turkey
- Invasiones (invasions) in Ecuador
- Khoshash in the Middle East
- Jhugi in India
- Kibera in Nairobi, Kenya
- Poblaciones callampas in Chile
- Pueblos jóvenes (young towns) or barriadas in Peru
- Ranchos in Venezuela
- Squatter camps in South Africa
- Villas miseria (poverty towns) in Argentina
- Bairro de Lata in the Portugal
[edit] See also
[edit] External link
- Slate article about an economist proposing New Orleans to be reconstructed with shantiesde:Informelle Siedlung
hr:Squatter naselje es:Asentamiento informal sr:Divlja naselja sv:Kåkstad

