Abstract

Currently, more than half of the world’s population lives in cities. Out of these more than four billion people, almost one quarter live in slums or informal settlements. In order to improve living conditions and provide possible solutions for the major problems in slums (e.g., insufficient infrastructure), it is important to understand the current situation of this form of settlement and its development. There are many different models that attempt to simulate the development of slums. In this paper, we present data mining models that correlate information about the temporal development of slums with other economic, ecologic, and demographic factors in order to identify dependencies. Different learning algorithms, such as decision rules and decision trees, are used to learn descriptive models for slum development from data, and the results are evaluated with commonly used attribute evaluation methods known from data mining. The results confirm various previously made statements about slum development in a quantitative way, such as the fact that slum development is very strongly linked to the demographic development of a country. Applying the introduced classification models to the most recent data for different regions, it can be shown that the slum development in Africa is expected to be above average.

Highlights

  • Urbanization is one of the greatest challenges faced by humanity in the coming years

  • Afterwards, we show indicators with a high correlation to slum development based on the three different approaches to attribute evaluation

  • The models analyzed are based on actual information about slum development at the country level, and have a statistical basis

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Summary

Introduction

Urbanization is one of the greatest challenges faced by humanity in the coming years. Cities in the Global South (Africa, Asia, and South America) are characterized by a rapidly increasing number of inhabitants, creating considerable problems for the infrastructure in the respective cities [2] These problems are evident in so-called “slums”, in literature often referred to as “informal settlements”. There are many discussions in the literature about these terms and the transferability of definitions to different regions (cf Hofmann et al [3]) In this context, we generally speak of settlements of the urban poor [4,5]. The UN estimates that about one billion people worldwide currently live in slums This number is expected to double or even triple by 2050 [7]

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