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Gender, domestic energy and design of inclusive low-income habitats: A case of slum rehabilitation housing in Mumbai, India

Accepted version
Peer-reviewed

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Type

Article

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Authors

Sunikka-Blank, M 
Haque, AN 

Abstract

© 2018 Elsevier Ltd Women's involvement in decision-making in domestic energy remains an under-researched area, especially in the urban context. This research adopts a gendered perspective in exploring slum rehabilitation housing in India. Based on a household survey and a focus group discussion (FGD), women's household and working practices are explored in interview narratives and systems analysis. The findings show that the relocation to slum rehabilitation housing (SRH) has radically changed women's household routines (cooking, comfort, childrearing, working and entertainment practices) and that women are more affected by the relocation than men. Changed practices, poor design of SRH and lack of outdoor space have radically increased electricity use and living costs in all the surveyed households. The economic pressure forces women into lowly paid jobs or informal economy, creating a vicious circle where women's time poverty further reduces their social capital and opportunities for self-development in terms of education or formal employment. A comparison of SRH typologies shows that building design has great influence both on gendered use of space and electricity use, advocating a courtyard typology. Further, interviews with policy-makers reveal a dis-juncture between the occupant realities and the policy objectives. The paper argues that gender equality can and should be influenced through energy and housing policies and offers a conceptual framework for inclusive SRH to address this dis-juncture.

Description

Keywords

Slum rehabilitation housing, Gender, Domestic energy use, Inequality, Design

Journal Title

Energy Research and Social Science

Conference Name

Journal ISSN

2214-6296
2214-6326

Volume Title

49

Publisher

Elsevier BV
Sponsorship
British Academy (KF1\100033)
The material presented in this manuscript is based in part upon work supported by a British Academy Knowledge Frontiers programme (KF1/100033), the Ministry of Human Resource Development (MHRD), the Government of India (GoI) project titled CoE-FAST (14MHRD005) and IRCC-IIT Bombay Fund (16IRCC561015). The authors acknowledge the support extended by Doctors For You (DFY) – pan India non-profit humanitarian organization for conducting the Focus Group Discussion and personal interviews at the rehabilitation colonies. They are also thankful to Chief Executive Officer – Slum Rehabilitation Authority (SRA) and Joint Secretary – Mumbai Metropolitan Region Development Authority (MMRDA) for their valuable insights in the slum rehabilitation process of Mumbai. Any opinions, findings and conclusions or recommendations expressed in this material are those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect the views of the NSF, MHRD, GoI and/or IRCC-IIT Bombay.