Journal of Environment and Earth Science www.iiste.org ISSN 2224-3216 (Paper) ISSN 2225-0948 (Online) Vol.6, No.3, 2016 74 Slum Conditions in Urban Nigeria: A Case of Jimeta-Yola, Adamawa State, Nigeria Phanuel B. Joshua * George Godwin Glanda Department of Geography, University of Maiduguri,PMB 1069, Maiduguri, along Bama Road, Borno state, Nigeria Abstract Urban areas the world over has witnessed an unprecedented growth and transformations since the turn of the twentieth Century. The rate of rural-urban migration has triggered high demand for housing, jobs, and pressure on the existing urban infrastructure. Slums began to spring up in the urban areas due to the desire for urban lifestyle. The study looked at the physical conditions of some selected slums in Jimeta-Yola, Adamawa State with a view to demonstrating the hardships being faced in these neighbourhoods so as to recommend a planning solution in the long run. Three slums were selected in the study area, namely: Luggere, Demsawo and NEPA/Alkalawa slums. In Luggere, ten (10) houses were selected for study on the income level of the residents and convenience facilities in their dwellings. It was found to be inadequate. In NEPA/Alkalawa area, ten (10) access/roads were assessed for proper circulation around the neighbourhood. It was found to be inefficient and sometimes impossible for vehicular circulation to occur. In Demsawo area, the drainage and the sanitary conditions of selected ten (10) streets were carried out. The results show that most of the streets do not have drainages and even the existing ones are blocked due to indiscriminate refuse/waste disposal in the area. The results are presented on tables and photographs are shown as plates. In view of all these myriad of challenges, recommendations for slum upgrading is proffered as a solution for the inhabitable conditions in the slums in Jimeta-Yola particularly and Nigeria in general. Keywords: Slum, Urban, Waste/Refuse, Sanitary condition, Access, Households, Neighbourhood 1. Introduction Slums are unplanned, unorganised, and clustered residential areas in urban centres mostly as a result of high influx of migrants for rural areas. In its groundbreaking report The Challenge of Slums, the United Nations Human Settlements Programme (UN-HABITAT) defines a slum as a household lacking any of the following: secured tenure; access to safe water or sanitation services; durable housing; and enough living space (Jackson, 2013). These areas form the inner city of most towns and cities in the world especially the developing countries where poverty is high. A slum may also be a heavily populated urban informal settlement characterized by substandard housing and squalor. While slums differ in size and other characteristics from country to country, most lack reliable sanitation services, supply of clean water, reliable electricity, timely law enforcement and other basic services. Slum residences vary from shanty houses to professionally-built dwellings that because of poor-quality design or construction have deteriorated into slums (Wikipedia, 2015). For example, the notorious Makoko slum in Lagos, Nigeria which is home to over 250, 000 people (IRIN, 2015). The situation of sanitation is very poor, and this is common to all slums as the facilities are either lacking or they are inadequate for the heavy population of residents in such neighbourhoods. The fact that such large proportions of urban residents dwell in slums summarises a critical factor that cannot be ignored when designing sustainable growth in cities: the vast majority of the hundreds of millions of migrants leaving behind their rural livelihoods in hopes of success in the city end up becoming part of the lowest socio-economic group - the urban poor. Different names have been given to slums in different parts of the World such as Shanty town, Favela, Rookery, Skid row, Ghetto among others. The study focuses on the physical characteristics of slums especially housing condition and sanitary facilities; nature and pattern of access/roads within as well as the waste management and disposal. Most of the world’s slums are in the developing countries of Africa, Asia and Latin America and a substantial population of the world lives in the slums. Sub-Saharan Africa has a slum population of 199.5 million, South Asia 190.7 million, East Asia 189.6 million, Latin America and the Caribbean 110.7 million, Southeast Asia 88.9 million, West Asia 35 million and North Africa 11.8 million (UN-Habitat, 2012). Pieterse (2014) corroborated the assertion made by UN-Habitat as he stated that almost 62% of urban residents in sub-Saharan Africa live in slum conditions and roughly 280 million urban dwellers are regarded as income poor. Conditions of these slums in Nigeria are getting worse over time even as some African countries are struggling to reduce this condition or reverse the tide of slums. Egypt, Libya, Morocco have nearly halved their total number of urban slum dwellers, and Tunisia has eradicated them completely. Ghana, Senegal and Uganda have managed to reduce urban slum populations by more than 20%. More than 75% of Nigeria's population lived in slums in 1990, but that is now 61.9%. In South Africa, slum numbers dropped from 46.2% to 28.7% of the population between 1990 and 2010 (Vidal, 2011). Poor sanitary condition in the slums is a serious cause for various types of ill-health experienced. For instance, a significant share of ill health in slums stems from poor brought to you by CORE View metadata, citation and similar papers at core.ac.uk provided by International Institute for Science, Technology and Education (IISTE): E-Journals