Pergamon
0197-3975(95)
HABITAT INTL. Vol. 20, No. 1, pp. 93-107, 1996
Copyright © 1995 Elsevier Science Ltd
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0197-3975/95 $9.50 + 0.00
Female Migrants in an Urban Setting
the Dimensions of Spatml/Physical
Adaptation
The Case of Dhaka
SHAHNAZ HUQ-HUSSAIN
University of Dhaka, Bangladesh
ABSTRACT
This paper outlines poor female migrants' adaptation process with respect to the
spatial/physical dimension in Dhaka, Bangladesh. The striking growth of Dhaka
during the period 1961-1981 has been attributed to rural-urban migration and
the absolute number of poor has risen. In 1991 Dhaka SMA received more than
40% of the total rural in-migrants. This paper is based on data obtained from
primary sources. In Bangladesh, women are termed as passive migrants and an
independent move by a woman is not a common phenomenon. The movement
of poor women with their families and as household heads to cities has increased
in recent years, opening up avenues for women to enter into the urban labour
market and strengthen their family income. Female migrants find shelter in the
highly congested slums and squatter areas of the city. Family heads, relatives
and friends are a vital source of finding accommodation for migrants. Housing
in the city is very different from that of rural areas. The city dwellings, in most
cases, lack basic utilities and are overcrowded with very little household floor
space. However, the close living in such dwellings with shared community water
taps, toilets and little open space helps migrant females to become familiar with
the urban utilities and affects their adaptation. The migrants tend to improve
their structural types of dwellings, floor space and utilities as the length of
stay increases due to better and more stable income. They also become more
mobile with respect to housing re-location and the poor migrants are prepared
to face any adversities as to their spatial location. Finally, with longer they stay
in the city, poor migrant females learn to adopt to the urban way of life in a
better manner.
INTRODUCTION
The causes and consequences of rural to urban migration are of growing concern
in developing countries. Rural to urban migration involves processes of change,
adjustment, adaptation and assimilation by migrants. Without the analysis of
the facets of the adaptation of migrants to the urban environment and its
*Correspondence to: Dr Shadhnaz Huq-Hussain, Department of Geography, University of Dhaka,
Bangladesh.
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