Friday, March 21, 2008

Land and People


For little Lebanon, geography is a source of both pride and suffering. Its Mediterranean coastline, to the west, is as beautiful as any in the world. Forested mountains along its spine -- rustic villages throughout -- are a visual delight. Further east, the Bekaa valley is among the world's most fertile. However, to the north and east sits Syria, Lebanon's self-appointed big brother, shaping/manipulating Beirut politics. Israel, to the south, has invaded Lebanon three times in the last thirty years, occupying southern Lebanon for an eighteen-year stint. Most recently, in response to a July 2006 attack on a group of its soldiers by the Lebanese resistance movement Hezbollah (and the capture of two), Israel launched a thirty-three day aerial bombardment of southern Lebanon. In the final 72 hours of the conflict -- after a tentative cease fire had been arranged -- Israel covered southern Lebanon with tens of thousands of cluster munitions. These munitions continue to pose a major hazard. They hamper the field work of Lebanese farmers, restricting their harvests and placing them in an even more precarious situation (given the scant support they receive from Lebanon's clannish, corrupt and neoliberal elite). I traveled to southern Lebanon in the company of Rami Zurayk, a professor at the American University of Beirut. Zurayk's Land and People group provides strategic marketing and technical services to Lebanese farmers, helping them carve out a niche, effectively brand their unique farm products and earn more money, whilst sustaining natural resources and strengthening Lebanons rural social fabric.

Sunday, March 16, 2008

Dharavi


Dharavi is a 200 hectare teardrop of land in the heart of Mumbai, home to almost a million people. This is where India's -- and the world's -- largest city began, as a cluster of mud islands. Generations of settlement, by waves of migrants from throughout India, have turned Dharavi into the "largest slum in Asia." But Dharavi is not your typical slum. The people of Dharavi -- really, a collection of communities sandwiched between Mumbai's two rail lines -- are highly productive. Most of Mumbai's solid waste is recycled here, and Dharavi is famous for its leatherwork, pottery and other cottage industries. Its narrow streets are packed with shops of all kinds. But Dharavi services are poor, and there's plenty of squalor. The Indian government's Slum Rehabilitation Authority has come up with improvement/redevelopment plans over the years. Now, with real estate values sky-high in Mumbai, and a major shopping district on the drawing boards just north of Dharavi, a multi-billion dollar redevelopment plan is now in the works, featuring highrises, shopping centers and prime office space. Trouble is, Dharavi residents are not being consulted. The idea is to divide Dharavi into five sectors, to be developed under international tender. People who've lived in Dharavi since 1995 will be entitled to 225 square feet (in a high-rise). But this will be nowhere near enough for Dharavi's ground-level cottage industries, which the Sector Redevelopment Plan may leave out in the cold