Slum Dwellers advocate Support for Bottom-Up Development Process
By Abdulrahman Abdullahi
A transnational social movement of the urban poor, Slum Dwellers International (SDI), says it is not on the same page with policymakers around the world enforcing a top-down development process.
Parts of the statement released by the agency reads: ‘’SDI is committed to supporting a process that is driven from below, ’’ the group said on its website.
SDI is a network of community-based organisations of the urban poor in 32 countries including Nigeria and hundreds of cities and towns across Africa, Asia, and Latin America.
In each country where it has a presence, affiliate organisations come together at the community, city, and national level to form federations of the urban poor.
Though these federations share specific methodologies, in its organisational form SDI consists of a Secretariat, a coordinating team, a Board and a Council of Federations.
The Secretariat has an administrative and management function. It is accountable to a board and a council of federations made up of nominated grassroots leaders from affiliated federations.
The board also nominates a coordinating team that serves as an executive, responsible for overseeing the implementation of SDI programmes.
The Secretariat facilitates, and sometimes resources, horizontal exchange and information sharing programmes amongst member Federations.
It also seeds precedent-setting projects. These exchange programmes and projects have a “political” dimension, to the extent that they are geared towards catalyzing change processes at all levels, from informal community-based institutions to formal institutions of the state and the market.
Since 1996, this network has helped to create a global voice of the urban poor, engaging international agencies and operating on the international stage to support and advance local struggles.
Nevertheless, the principal theatre of practice for SDI’s constituent organisations is the local level: the informal settlements where the urban poor of the developing world struggle to build more inclusive cities, economies, and politics.