Abstract:
South African history widely documents poor women's housing exclusion in urban areas during the apartheid
era. While the post-apartheid housing programmess inclusionary objectives resulted in some women's access
to housing, its limited scale and some characteristics of the housing that was delivered meant that many poor
women were already experiencing urban exclusion and housing precarity when the COVID-19 pandemic
struck. Drawing on a growing body of COVID-19-related research as well as government responses, this article
uses a gender analysis to unpack the notion of inclusive cities in the context of housing during the pandemic.
It argues that despite the evolution of housing policy to include sustainability notions, in particular Sustainable
Development Goal 11, which aims to make cities and human settlements inclusive and sustainable, challenges
to poor women's urban inclusion not only remain, but have been exacerbated by the pandemic. Low-income
women's exposure to insecurities related to health, safety, affordability and loss of housing have shown cities
to be neither inclusive nor sustainable for poor women, while gender-blind interventions have failed to take
cognizance of the gendered impact of the pandemic on their housing experience. The article calls for post-pandemic recovery responses that take into account the constraints that hinder women's urban housing
inclusion in the first instance.
Reference:
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