Jota Samper The informal settlements reshaping the world TED

Transcriber:

When I was six years old,

growing up in Medellín, Colombia,

I made one of the most impactful
decisions of my life.

I asked my mother to change my school,

to the school where she was teaching.

To my surprise, she said yes.

So I switched from a rich, private
Catholic school to a public school

where 99 percent of the students
live in a condition of extreme poverty.

The only meal some of my friends ate a day

was the one that was given in school.

My friends and I lived
close to each other, but worlds apart.

I lived in a neighborhood
with a museum, a library, parks,

and they lived in a neighborhood

with the lack of the most
basic necessities,

such as potable water or electricity.

More importantly, they lived in
a place surrounded by danger,

from guns to landslides.

Their suffering was not unique.

Up in the mountains,
in Medellín informal settlements,

thousands of families
were having the same problems

[as] my friends and their families,

fearing that the police or the rains
would take their homes away.

I learned so much from my friends,

but what continued to surprise me the most
is their resilience and optimism

in the face of adversity.

Growing up with people that I care [about]

is what had led me to the story
of informal settlements.

I teach now at the University
of Colorado, Boulder,

in the program of environmental design.

I study informal settlements

because even if they are
invisible to most of us,

they represent one of humanity’s
biggest challenges.

And yet they provide great insight
in how cities develop and innovate.

There are three crucial things

that I have learned
about informal settlements

that I want to share with you today.

The first one is that informal settlements
are a widespread form of city making.

The second one

is that by making visible populations
in informal settlements,

we can save their lives.

The third one is that we pay
more attention

to the creativity of people
who live in these places,

we could be aware of innovations
that can save the planet.

Informal settlements
can be broadly described

as self-built neighborhoods
outside of city regulations

in conditions of extreme poverty.

Nowadays,

more than a billion people
live in informal settlements

all around the world.

By the year 2050,

one in three people on the planet

will live in one of these places

without potable water,
adequate sanitation

and in condition of extreme poverty.

This makes informal settlements,
what some call the slums,

the most common form
of urbanization of the planet.

The paradox of informal settlements
is that they are vast and common.

However, the people and the places
in which they live

are the most invisible.

There is much that we don’t know
about these places

and that ignorance creates barriers
to develop tools to help them.

A first step to make
visible these populations

is to record the conditions
in which they live.

However, many countries
where the informal settlements are

do not have the resources
to map these populations.

And the countries who have the resources

sometimes have legal restrictions
that impede the state organizations

to support the work
on informal settlements.

These unknowns create vacuums
to understand informality

and support the dissemination
of misconceptions

about the real challenges
and opportunities of informality.

As I started to learn more
about the informal settlements,

I realized the scarcity of data available.

Most of our understanding
about informality

comes from separate
and unreliable sources.

There is not a single database

that contains all the informal
settlements in the world.

To try to aid in such a puzzle,

I created alongside hundreds
of collaborators the Atlas of Informality.

The Atlas is a creative attempt
to visualize these invisible populations

in an effort to understand
the unique process

of informal city making.

A crucial question
that we wanted to resolve here

was how these places evolve over time.

This was important

not only to understand the past,

but more importantly,
the future of informal settlements

and the future of all world cities.

We at Environmental Design Program

created a protocol
with open-access software,

remote sensing tools and direct mapping

to identify and map
the change of informal settlements

over the last 15 years all over the world.

The key was to develop a tool
that was simple to use

and that allows us to reach
most of the planet.

A tool that allows to compare
these places at the same level.

We have now mapped more than 400
informal settlements all over the world,

and we have realized how each one of them
is changing and expanding

as a result of the arriving populations.

We discovered things expected.

Regions are expanding at different rates.

Informal settlements in Latin America
and Africa are expanding more rapidly

than those in Asia.

More importantly,

we discovered that the entire sample

continues expanding at a rate
of 9.85 percent.

But what [does] this obscure number mean?

It means that every year

2,300 square kilometers
of informal settlements

are created out of the expansion
of existing ones.

This expansion means that every year,

at the informal settlement, a slum,

a city larger that some
of the largest cities on the planet,

such as Moscow,

Houston or Tokyo,

is created out of the expansion
of existing settlements.

As these places continue
to grow in darkness,

we are blinded to what happens
in the cities emerging every day.

This is why I have dedicated my life

to the co-production with communities
that live in informal settlements.

Not only to try to improve
their conditions of living,

but to learn from them

about the unique process
of informal city making.

Working with families and community
members over the last 10 years,

I have learned that to solve

the informal settlements
most challenging problems

new cutting-edge strategies are needed.

And that the source of that innovation

resides already within the knowledge
of these communities.

I have learned that for each problem

there is a community-based solution
spearheaded by the people living there.

For example,

we learn fascinating things
from communities like Carpinelo

or Manantiales de Paz in Colombia,

who organized themselves
to build infrastructure improvements.

They call these “combites”.

These infrastructure improvements go
from the creation of water systems

to stairways, to roads.

At the family level,
we find incredible financing mechanisms.

Like they’re renting of rooms
to pay for home expansions

or the creation of micro businesses
tailored to the surrounding populations.

One of my goals now

is the emulation of those
strategies at larger scales.

Creative informal solutions
follow a disruptive process

that breaks away with traditional ways
in which we think about cities.

Planners, city officials and architects
tend to operate in cities

in similar ways as those set up
at the beginning of the 20th century.

What forced them and us

to think about the informal
settlements as a pathology,

as a disease,

as something that needs to be eradicated.

This old-fashioned way
of looking at slums

forces the use of obsolete strategies.

As a result, slum eradication programs
have left millions homeless

and have only displayed
the problem to other places.

In unbelievable contrast,

the resources of informal dwellers
for these populations

to find unconventional ways
to solve the same problems.

Their solutions are less
environmentally impactful

and rely less on the need of big
infrastructure improvements.

These solutions could be as physical

as the creation of pedestrian-friendly
compact neighborhoods,

or as strategic

as the setup of community-based
banking systems.

These solutions could work both

for informal settlements
with less resources

and to cities in the search
of more sustainable development.

Making these places visible

is not only essential
to help impoverished communities,

it’s also vital for the rest of us.

These populations living in scarcity
are forced to innovate

and create these disruptive
urban products.

Informal communities have always thrived,

finding new opportunities
out of necessity,

from unofficial moto-taxis,
private vehicles that serve the public,

a response for the need for affordable
transportation systems,

or like the renting of rooms
to pay for home expansions,

what makes homes in informal settlements
a self-sustainable urban model.

Think about how radical this idea is.

That instead of getting a loan
to pay for your home,

your home is the business
that pays for the place that you live in.

Of course, I don’t want
to romanticize these solutions,

as they are the result of innovation
out of dramatic suffering.

But what I want to say is that there is
much that we could learn from them.

In fact, I think there are some
that are already learning.

I argue

that today, some of the most
disruptive urban products,

such as the ride apps,

similar to the moto-taxis,

or the home-sharing economy,

similar to the self-financing
urban model in informal settlements,

started decades ago

in the confines of informal settlements.

If we pay more attention to visibilizing
these invisible populations,

we will not only have the opportunity
to support the effort of billions,

but we could learn from them
how we can change the planet.

Now, thinking back about my schoolmates,

the communities which I collaborate with

and the billions living
in informal settlements,

there are three things
that we all need to do.

The first one is that we need to make
these communities more visible.

They are part of our cities,

they deserve to be respected
and accounted.

Second is that we need to pay
more attention to the creativity

and innovation that happen
in these places.

The next billion-dollar business,

the next urban sustainable solution
has already been invented

in one of the thousands informal
settlements around the world.

And finally, we need to apply
what we learned there.

For the future one third of the planet

and for our cities that need to be safe.

Thank you.

抄写员:

当我六岁时

,在哥伦比亚麦德林长大,

我做出了我一生中最有影响力的
决定之一。

我让妈妈把我的学校换

到她教书的学校。

令我惊讶的是,她答应了。

所以我从一所富有的私立
天主教学校转到一所公立学校

,那里 99% 的学生
生活在极度贫困的环境中。

我的一些朋友一天吃的唯一一顿饭

是在学校给的那顿饭。

我和我的朋友住的
很近,但天壤之别。

我住在一个
有博物馆、图书馆、公园

的社区,他们住在一个

缺乏
最基本必需品的社区,

比如饮用水或电力。

更重要的是,他们生活在
一个被危险包围的地方,

从枪支到山体滑坡。

他们的苦难并不是独一无二的。

在山上,
在麦德林的非正式定居点,

成千上万的家庭
面临着与

我的朋友和他们的家人一样的问题,

担心警察或雨水
会把他们的家园带走。

我从朋友那里学到了很多,

但最让我惊讶的
是他们

在逆境中的韧性和乐观。

和我关心的人一起长大,这

让我想到
了非正式定居点的故事。

我现在在
科罗拉多大学博尔德

分校教授环境设计课程。

我研究非正式住区

是因为即使它们
对我们大多数人来说是不可见的,

它们也代表了人类
面临的最大挑战之一。

然而,它们为
城市如何发展和创新提供了深刻的见解。

我今天想与大家

分享
关于非正规住区

的三件重要的事情。

第一个是非正式住区
是城市建设的一种普遍形式。

第二个

是通过让
非正规住区的人口可见,

我们可以挽救他们的生命。

第三个是我们
更加关注

生活在这些地方的人们的创造力,

我们可以
意识到可以拯救地球的创新。

非正式住区
可以广义地描述

在极端贫困条件下在城市法规之外自建的社区。

如今,

全世界有超过 10 亿人
居住在非正规住区

到 2050 年,

地球上三分之一的人

将生活在这些地方之一,

没有饮用水,没有
足够的卫生设施

,处于极端贫困的境地。

这使得非正规住区,也
就是一些人所说的贫民窟,

成为地球上最常见的城市化形式。

非正规住区的矛盾之
处在于它们规模庞大且普遍。

然而,他们居住的人和地方

是最看不见的。

我们
对这些地方有很多不了解的地方

,而无知
为开发帮助他们的工具制造了障碍。

使
这些人口可见的第一步

是记录
他们的生活条件。

然而,许多
非正规住区所在的国家

没有资源
来绘制这些人口的地图。

拥有资源的国家

有时会受到
阻碍国家

组织支持
非正规住区工作的法律限制。

这些未知数创造
了理解非正式性的真空,并支持传播对非正式性

的真正挑战
和机遇的误解。

当我开始更多地
了解非正规住区时,

我意识到可用数据的稀缺性。

我们
对非正规性的大部分理解

来自独立
且不可靠的来源。

没有一个数据库

可以包含世界上所有的非正规
住区。

为了帮助解决这样的难题,

我与数百名合作者一起创建
了非正式地图集。

Atlas 是一种创造性的
尝试,将这些隐形人口可视化

,以努力了解

非正式城市建设的独特过程。

我们想在这里解决的一个关键问题

是这些地方如何随着时间的推移而演变。

不仅对于了解过去

很重要,更重要的是,
对于非正规

住区的未来和所有世界城市的未来。

我们在环境设计计划

创建了一个协议,
其中包含开放访问软件、

遥感工具和直接映射,

以识别和绘制

过去 15 年来全世界非正规住区的变化。

关键是开发一种易于使用的工具

,使我们能够到达
地球的大部分地区。

一个允许
在同一级别比较这些地方的工具。

我们现在已经绘制
了世界各地 400 多个非正式定居点的地图,

并且我们已经意识到每个定居点都如何

因人口的到来而发生变化和扩大。

我们发现了预期的事情。

地区正在以不同的速度扩张。

拉丁美洲
和非洲的非正式定居点的扩张速度

比亚洲的要快。

更重要的是,

我们发现整个样本

继续以
9.85% 的速度膨胀。

但是这个不起眼的数字是什么意思?

这意味着每年有

2,300 平方公里
的非正规住区

是在现有住区的扩建
中产生的。

这种扩张意味着,每年

在非正式定居点,一个贫民窟,

一个比
地球上一些最大的城市,

如莫斯科、

休斯顿或东京还要大的城市,

是在
现有定居点的扩张中产生的。

随着这些地方继续
在黑暗中成长,

我们对
每天出现的城市中发生的事情视而不见。

这就是为什么我毕生

致力于与
生活在非正规住区的社区共同制作。

不仅要努力改善
他们的生活条件,

还要向他们学习

非正式城市建设的独特过程。

在过去 10 年与家庭和社区成员的合作中,

我了解到,要

解决非正规住区
最具挑战性的问题,

需要新的尖端战略。

并且该创新的来源

已经存在于这些社区的知识
中。

我了解到,对于每个问题,

都有一个
由居住在那里的人们带头的基于社区的解决方案。

例如,

我们

哥伦比亚的 Carpinelo 或 Manantiales de Paz 等社区学到了有趣的东西,

他们组织起来
改善基础设施。

他们称这些为“combites”。

这些基础设施的改进
从创建供水系统

到楼梯,再到道路。

在家庭层面,
我们发现了令人难以置信的融资机制。

就像他们租用房间
来支付房屋扩建

或创建适合周围人群的微型企业一样

我现在

的目标之一是
在更大范围内模拟这些策略。

创造性的非正式解决方案
遵循一个颠覆性的过程

,打破
了我们对城市的传统看法。

规划师、城市官员和建筑师
倾向于以与 20 世纪初

建立的方式相似的方式在城市中运作

是什么迫使他们和

我们将非正规
住区视为一种病态

,一种疾病,

一种需要根除的东西。

这种看待贫民窟的老式方式

迫使人们使用过时的策略。

结果,贫民窟根除
计划使数百万人无家可归

,并且只
向其他地方展示了这个问题。

与此形成令人难以置信的对比的

是,非正规居民的资源
为这些

人群寻找非常规的方法
来解决同样的问题。

他们的解决方案对
环境的影响

较小,并且较少依赖大型
基础设施改进的需求。

这些解决方案可以

像创建步行友好的
紧凑型社区一样有形,

也可以

像建立以社区为基础的
银行系统一样具有战略意义。

这些解决方案既

适用于
资源较少的非正规住区,也适用


寻求更可持续发展的城市。

让这些地方

可见,不仅
对帮助贫困社区

至关重要,对我们其他人也至关重要。

这些生活在稀缺
中的人口被迫创新

并创造这些破坏性的
城市产品。

非正式社区总是蓬勃发展,

从非官方的摩托出租车
、为公众服务的私家车、

对负担得起的交通系统需求的回应

或者像租用房间
来支付房屋扩建费用等

,寻找新的机会。 非正规住区的住宅是
一种自我可持续的城市模式。

想想这个想法有多激进。

与其通过贷款
来支付你的房子,

你的房子是
为你所居住的地方买单的企业。

当然,我不想
把这些解决方案浪漫化,

因为它们是
戏剧性创新的结果 痛苦。

但我想说的
是,我们可以从他们身上学到很多东西。

事实上,我
认为有些人已经在学习。

我认为

,今天,一些最具
颠覆性的城市产品

,例如类似于摩托车出租车的乘车应用程序,

类似于
非正规住区中的自筹资金城市模式的家庭共享经济,

始于几十年前

的 非正规住区的范围。

如果我们更加关注
这些隐形人口的可视化,

我们不仅将有
机会支持数十亿人的努力,

而且我们可以向他们学习
如何改变地球。

现在,回想我的同学、

与我合作的社区

以及生活在非正规住区的数十亿人

,我们都需要做三件事。

第一个是我们需要让
这些社区更加引人注目。

他们是我们城市的一部分,

他们应该受到尊重
和重视。

其次,我们需要
更多地关注这些地方发生的创造力

和创新

下一个十亿美元的业务

,下一个城市可持续解决方案
已经在全球

数千个非正规住区之一发明出来

最后,我们需要应用
我们在那里学到的东西。

为了地球三分之一的未来

,为了我们需要安全的城市。

谢谢你。