Chirisa Innocent, Mutambisi Tafadzwa, Chivenge Marcyline, Mabaso Elias, Matamanda Abraham R, Ncube Roselin
University of Zimbabwe, Harare, Zimbabwe.
University of the Free State, Bloemfontein, South Africa.
GeoJournal. 2022;87(2):815-828. doi: 10.1007/s10708-020-10281-6. Epub 2020 Aug 27.
The paper contributes towards deciphering and decoding the misery of the urban poor in light of the COVID-19 scourge. The paper unpacks urban poverty in light of the corona virus. The emergence of the COVID-19 and the lack of any vaccines requires physical distancing as preventative measures to contain and reduce the spread of the virus. Governments across the world, including in Anglophone Sub Saharan Africa have implemented lockdown measures. The COVID-19 pandemic is happening within settlements where the majority of the population lives from hand to mouth. In Anglophone sub-Saharan Africa because of urbanisation and increased urban poverty, COVID-19 scourge has had a huge impact on the urban poor. The COVID-19 is likely to devastate economies and the community. For rapidly growing, densely populated and poorly planned settlements, the situation is tragic for these inhabitants. Nation states lockdown and social and physical distancing in response to the pandemic have escalated their misery. The paper adopts a critical review of literature anchored in case study analysis, document analysis and scanning from reports. Results point to redefining the way humanity has related, functioned and conceptualised realities. There is need to go beyond prevention from infection as majority of urban dwellers are in the informal sector or unemployed. For the urban poor, strategies for social distancing may not be possible or effective. People are being asked to make choices between being hungry and risk of getting infected. The paper recommends planning response at national, regional and local level bearing in mind informal settlements, high densities and forms of overcrowding which have been placed as hotspots for the virus. There is need for rebuilding societies, during and beyond COVID-19 calling for immediate disaster risk planning adaptation and transformation to promote resilience.
本文有助于根据新冠疫情来解读和剖析城市贫困人口的苦难。本文根据冠状病毒来剖析城市贫困问题。新冠疫情的出现以及缺乏任何疫苗,要求保持社交距离作为遏制和减少病毒传播的预防措施。包括撒哈拉以南非洲英语国家在内的世界各国政府都实施了封锁措施。新冠疫情发生在大多数人口仅够糊口的定居点内。在撒哈拉以南非洲英语国家,由于城市化和城市贫困加剧,新冠疫情对城市贫困人口产生了巨大影响。新冠疫情可能会摧毁经济和社区。对于快速发展、人口密集且规划不善的定居点来说,这种情况对其居民而言是悲惨的。各国政府为应对疫情而实施的封锁以及社交和物理距离措施加剧了他们的苦难。本文采用基于案例分析、文献分析和报告研读的批判性文献综述方法。结果表明需要重新定义人类与现实的关联方式、运作方式和概念化方式。由于大多数城市居民从事非正规部门工作或失业,因此有必要超越预防感染的范畴。对于城市贫困人口来说,社交距离策略可能不可行或无效。人们被迫在饥饿和感染风险之间做出选择。本文建议在国家、区域和地方层面制定应对计划,同时要考虑到非正规住区、高密度人口和过度拥挤的形式,这些地方已被列为病毒的热点地区。在新冠疫情期间及之后,需要重建社会,这就要求立即进行灾害风险规划调整和转型,以增强复原力。