ABSTRACT

The most important conclusion from our work is that in most urban contexts in the Global South, poverty can only be reduced significantly when urban poor groups and their organisations can influence what is done by the local and national government agencies that are tasked to support them, and when they have the space to design and implement their own initiatives and then scale up with government support. It is the learning from their own work and from each other and the demonstration to local government of what they can do that enables creative co-production with the state and larger-scale programmes to develop. For the networks or federations of slum or shack dwellers or homeless people, coproduction enables them to secure legitimacy and to gain more political influence, improved policies and a greater share of state resources. Much of what is discussed in previous chapters is about when and how this is possible.