Urban Land Vulnerability in a Sahelian City in West Africa: The Case of the Niamey 5 Communal District, Niger
ADAM ELHADJ SAIDI Aboubacar *
Department of Geography, Faculty of Letters and Human Sciences, Abdou Moumouni University, Niger.
MOUSSA Soulé
Department of Biology, Faculty of Sciences and Techniques,University Dan Dicko Dankoulodo of Maradi (UDDM), Maradi, Niger.
*Author to whom correspondence should be addressed.
Abstract
Urban land vulnerability leads to many socioeconomic and environmental problems. Sahelian cities face this problem due to the non-respect of urban planning documents. Therefore, this study tries to determine the different forms of household land vulnerability and their differentiating factors among urban households in the Niamey 5 municipal district. A total of 388 households were surveyed based on a stratified random sample. Chi-squared test and the percentage were used for data analysis. The results of the statistical analysis reveal that 55.4% of households occupy informally divided spaces (informal housing development, squatter, village core). Only 16.98% of household owners have a definitive land title, compared to 83.73% who only have precarious security documents: customary ownership (38.20%), transfer deed (17.92%), sale deed (16.98%), and no papers (9.91%). Few tenant households (17.3%) have a lease agreement that can secure their tenure status, while 88.7% do not. Land vulnerability varies from one household to another depending on the household's tenure status. Households in a low land vulnerability situation are 96.90% owners and 3.10% co-owners. On the other hand, the 40.6% of households in a high vulnerability situation are tenants and 12.8% are rent-free. This study provides a baseline for policy makers to improve urban planning conditions.
Keywords: Land insecury, Sahelian cities, households, land vulnerability, urban planning