Abstract

Dynamic urbanization of African cities has created development trajectories that face systemic challenges in the provision of sustainable and ecologically resilient urban environments. The specific challenges include extensive unregulated growth with informal settlements reflecting poor service levels and high poverty indices, inadequacy in provision of basic services in health, water, housing, transport and communication infrastructure, high reliance on biomass fuels, exposure to environmental stress and implausible climate change coping and mitigation mechanisms among others. Review of extensive literature and synthesis of existing bodies of knowledge on the ecological and management perspectives of urban environments revealed many gaps and understanding of urban transformation processes. The purpose of this review was to contextualize credible pathways for optimization of both ecosystem goods and services from green urban landscapes (Green infrastructure) and non-green infrastructure to ensure sustainable and ecologically resilient urban environments. Attempts were made to rationalize and validate through discussions the benefits of managed urban ecosystems for African cities. On the basis of the evidence from the literature, it is concluded that urban development trajectories that do not embrace multifaceted approaches that deliberately retain and maintain green infrastructure in the urban environment may not be cost-effective. It is recommended that systematic integration of urban forestry concepts in urban planning that involves communities, local and national governments, business entrepreneurs and public and private research institutions provides tenable frameworks for addressing current and future challenges of urbanization in Africa.

Highlights

  • A casual inspection and coherent synthesis of literature on the urbanization trajectories of African cities and development pathways in the context of opportunities and multi-faceted challenges of dynamic transition to urbanization reveals the following salient features: 1)

  • Demographic forecasts indicate that the greatest demographic pressure will occur in the East African cities of Nairobi, Dar es Salaam and Mombasa whose urban population is expected to grow between 2.5% and 4% in the period 2020-2050

  • The East African cities of Nairobi, Mombasa, Kisumu, Kampala and Dar es Salaam attracted a special class of Indian business communities and industrialists as well as African political elites and administrators who have continued to predominate and control city economic activities often causing resentment to the majority of the poor marginalized communities “excluded” from city mainstream economic activities

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Summary

Introduction

A casual inspection and coherent synthesis of literature on the urbanization trajectories of African cities and development pathways in the context of opportunities and multi-faceted challenges of dynamic transition to urbanization reveals the following salient features: 1). Extensive unregulated urban growth associated with informal settlements with poor service levels (Anderson et al, 2013, Pieterse, 2006, 2010), urban population in Kenya was 27.51% of the total population in 2019 (1960-2019 World Bank Data). Exposure of cities to environmental stresses associated with poor climate change coping and mitigation mechanisms. Urban development trajectories that face systemic multiscale challenges impeding the ability to offer exclusively sustainable ecological habitats, Rowcroft & Black (2017) International Institute for Sustainable Development, http://prairieclimatecentre.ca/, https://openknowledge.worldbank.org/

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