The Dictionary of Human Geography

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means of paying off a debt or a loan in
their own countries, especially in India,
Pakistan, Bangladesh and Nepal. When these
are included, the International Labour
Organization estimates that the minimum
total of people enduring some form of forced
servitude is 12.3 million, while Bales (2004,
p. 8) puts the figure at 27 million: both esti-
mates are more than the total number caught
up in the horrors of the Black Atlantic
(Epstein, 2006). dcl

Suggested reading
Bales (2004); Drescher and Engerman (1998).

slum An area of substandard housing and
inadequate provision of public utilities (espe-
cially water and sanitation), inhabited by
poor people in high densities, who develop a
distinctive culture as a means of both survival
and self-respect. The term originated in
Britain in the early decades of the nineteenth
century. Labourers living in the countryside
endured wretched conditions too, but the
overcrowding of tenements in the central dis-
tricts of industrial cities – the shock cities of
the age – and of capital cities such as London
was symptomatic of the slum. Life in these
communitiesbecame a central object of social
commentary and investigation, in studies such
as Engels’Condition of the English working class
(1844) and novels such as Dickens’Hard times
(1854). Areas of poor housing for poor people
had existed in many other periods and places
too, from imperial Rome to Georgian Bath,
but it was the connection forged between the
built environment and the ‘moral environ-
ment’ – by the close of the century, fears over
public order and public health were increas-
ingly compounded bybiopoliticaltheses of
‘urban degeneration’ (cf. Luckin, 2006) – that
was diagnostic of the politics of the slum on
both sides of the Atlantic. The connection was
both constructed and contested (Ward, 1976),
so that slums were not only the product of
intersections between housing and (often cas-
ual)labour marketsbut also of a particular
imaginative geography (Stedman Jones,
1991 [1974]; Mayne, 1993). Their modern
analysis has relied on recovering built forms
andmaterial cultures, and analysing con-
temporary photographs and memoirs (Rose,
1997a; Mayne and Murray, 2001; cf. Roberts,
1990). Slums became targets forstateinter-
vention, including social regulation andurban
renewalin the nineteenth century – one of
the objectives of the Haussmannization of
Paris – and ‘slum clearance’ schemes in the

nineteenth and twentieth centuries (Wohl,
1977; Yelling, 1986, 2000).
The political salience of the term has been
revived by critics such as Davis (2006), who
points to the contemporary transposition of
slums from the globalnorthto the global
south. Colonial cities were often bipolar,
with acordon sanitairebetween the European
districts (the ‘white city’) and the poor, over-
crowded ‘native city’, but the slum is primarily
a product of class zonation rather than
the racial discriminations associated with the
ghetto. Class distinctions loom large in the
rapidly growing cities of the South, and it is
estimated that one-third of the global urban
population now lives in slums, the vast majority
of them in the South (Davis, 2006, p. 23). If the
overcrowding, poverty, human degradation
and exploitation are familiar from older
descriptions – ‘There is nothing in the cata-
logue of Victorian misery that doesn’t exist
somewhere in a Third World City today’
(Davis, 2006, p. 186) – the immensity of scale
is radically new. And unlike the nineteenth-
century slums of the North, most of these new
slums are on the edges of cities (not at the core)
and their production is wired to transnational
(not national) circuits of capital and to the
political–economic projects ofneo-liberalism.
Finally, if slums have always been sites for the
warehousing of what Marx called a ‘surplus
army’ of labour, the new slums confront real
armies who foresee urban warfare swirling
around our ‘planet of slums’ (Davis, 2006,
pp. 202–6). Although this dystopian vision is
rhetorically powerful, however, it offers a
remarkably undifferentiated view of a far more
complex urban geography and it overlooks the
crucial contribution of progressive urban
social movements(Angotti, 2006). Indeed,
Roy’s (2003) incisive exposure of the politics
ofpovertyin Calcutta is explicitly staged as ‘a
satire on the very trope of the dying city’ and,
like Simone’s (2004) brilliant study of four
African cities, is a critique of the urban fantasies
(and fears) ofabjectionand failure projected
on to cities of the global South by planners and
theorists alike, and contained within the very
concept of a ‘slum’. (See alsosquatting.) dg

Suggested reading
Davis (2006); Philpott (1991 [1978]); Ward
(1976).

social area analysis Atheoryand related
technique for characterizing urban residential
neighbourhoods, linking changes in urban
social structure to economic development

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SLUM
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