Abstract

Highly dynamic peri-urban areas, particularly in the Global South, face many challenges including a lack of infrastructure, ownership conflicts, land degradation, and sustainable food production. This study aims to assess spatial land use characteristics and processes in peri-urban areas using the case of Dar es Salaam, Tanzania. A mixed-method approach was applied, consisting of expert interviews and spatial data analysis, on a local scale along an urban–rural gradient. Expert interviews were conducted during a field study and analyzed regarding the characteristics and processes of peri-urban land development. A GIS-based analysis of land use patterns was applied using satellite imagery and Open Street Map data to identify a number of variables, such as building density and proximity to environmental features. Results show specific patterns of land use indicators, which can be decreasing (e.g., house density), increasing (e.g., tree coverage), static (e.g., house size), or randomly distributed (e.g., distance to river), along a peri-urban gradient. Key findings identify lack of service structures and access to public transport as major challenges for the population of peri-urban areas. The combination of qualitative expert interviews and metrics-based quantitative spatial pattern analysis contributes to improved understanding of the patterns and processes in peri-urban land use changes.

Highlights

  • With increasing urbanization and over half of the world’s population living in cities, urban areas and their inhabitants face many challenges, including socio-economic and ecological changes [1]

  • We identify and analyses indicators using a gradient approach in order to answer the following questions: (1) What are spatio-temporal characteristics and patterns of peri-urban areas? (2) How can dynamics along a peri-urban gradient be generalized and conceptualized? While we show the processes along a case-study specific peri-urban gradient, the methodology and conceptual conclusions may be transferred to other regions

  • Land Act of 1999 that defines peri-urban areas as “those located within a radius of 10 km outside the boundaries of an urban or semi built-up area, which may be prescribed by the Minister for Lands, Housing, and Human Settlements Development” [55]

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Summary

Introduction

With increasing urbanization and over half of the world’s population living in cities, urban areas and their inhabitants face many challenges, including socio-economic and ecological changes [1]. Urban growth spreading into peri-urban areas is a key driver of unsustainable development [2], and in Sub-Saharan Africa, local and regional governments face difficulties in monitoring and addressing urban expansion. Significant demographic pressure is expected in Dar es Salaam, for example, where approximately 226,000 new urban dwellers are expected annually [1]. In the less-developed world, urbanization surpasses all other uses for land adjacent to the city, including prime croplands [5]. Peri-urban farms: What are specific characteristics/how are they organized?.

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