House hold and collective responses to the absence of electricity supply in informal settlements in Johannesburg: a case study of Msawawa and Kya Sands
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Date
2018
Authors
Nxumalo, Feza Hugh
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Abstract
The South African Constitution gives every citizen a right to basic services, and this exclude
electrification of every households. It covers basic human rights, and articulates them as
Water, and Sanitation. The Department of Energy recognises electrification as basic right
through electrification categories provided for informal settlements dwellers. However, many
households in informal settlements live without electricity. This research is a case study of
Kya Sands and Msawawa informal settlements, two informal settlements on the north
western outskirts of Johannesburg that are not connected to formal electricity supply. It
explores how their communities respond to the absence of electricity. The study took a
qualitative approach based on interviews with residents, business owners and leaders of
Msawawa and Kya Sands informal settlements.
The finding is that household responses differ across the two informal settlements, in part
depending on the strategy adopted by the informal settlement community and the
leadership, and in part determined by the sources of energy or fuel in the area. This research
reveals a variety of energy sources, and questions the common perception that all informal
settlement dwellers have informal electricity connections.
Description
A research report submitted to the Faculty of Engineering and the Built
Environment, University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg in partial
fulfilment of the requirements for the degree of Masters of the Built
Environment in the Field of Housing, Johannesburg, 2018.
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Citation
Nxumalo, Feza Hugh (2018) Household and collective responses to the absence of electricity supply in informal settlements in Johannesburg :a case study of Msawawa and Kya Sands, University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg, https://hdl.handle.net/10539/26966