India - Urban Slums Survey: NSS 58th Round, Schedule 0.21, July - December 2002
Reference ID | DDI-IND-MOSPI-NSSO-58Rnd-Sch-0dot21-2002 |
Year | 2002 |
Country | India |
Producer(s) | National Sample Survey Office |
Sponsor(s) | M/o Statistics & Programme Implementation, GOI - MOSPI - |
Collection(s) | |
Metadata |
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Jul 29, 2016
Last modified
Sep 02, 2016
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Overview
Identification
Country
IndiaTitle
Urban Slums Survey: NSS 58th Round, Schedule 0.21, July - December 2002Study Type
Socio-Economic/Household Survey
Series Information
The first nationwide survey on the ‘economic condition of slum dwellers in urban cities’ was conducted by the National Sample Survey Organisation (NSSO) in its 31st round enquiry (July 1976 - June 1977). The survey was restricted to (i) all the Class I towns having 1971 census population one lakh or more and (ii) two Class II towns, viz. Shillong and Pondicherry. Only the cities proper and not the urban agglomerations were considered for the survey coverage. For identifying ‘undeclared slums’, a slum was defined as an areal unit having twenty five or more katcha structures mostly of temporary nature, or fifty or more households residing mostly in katcha structures, huddled together, or inhabited by persons with practically no private latrine and inadequate public latrine and water facilities. The
survey results were published in NSS Report No. 290: Condition of Slum Areas in Cities.
The second nationwide survey on particulars of slums was conducted by the NSSO in its 49th round enquiry (January - June 1993), which covered rural as well as urban areas. Two kinds of slums – ‘declared’ and ‘undeclared’ – were covered. Certain areas declared as ‘slums’ by the appropriate municipality, corporation, local body or development authorities were the ‘declared slums’. Outside the declared slums, any compact area with a collection of poorly built tenements, mostly of temporary nature, crowded together – usually with inadequate sanitary and drinking water facilities – in unhygienic conditions was considered an ‘undeclared slum’, if at least 20 households lived in that area.
The present survey – After a gap of nearly ten years, the third survey in the series was conducted in the 58th round enquiry (July-December 2002). The concept of slum being basically urban, the Governing Council of the NSSO decided, on the recommendation of the Working Group on NSS 58th round, to cover only urban slums in the survey. Like the 49th round survey, this survey, too, dealt with the availibility and not the adequacy of facilities available in the slums.
The aim was to collect information on the present condition of the slums and on the change in the condition of some facilities available therein. Like the 58th round survey, this survey was confined to the urban sector. Only slums found in the randomly selected urban blocks were surveyed.
ID Number DDI-IND-MOSPI-NSSO-58Rnd-Sch-0dot21-2002 |
Version
Version Description
Production Date
2012-05-15Overview
Abstract
The NSSO conducted an integrated household survey in its 58th round during the period July 2002 to December 2002. Some general features about the slum, including information on any improvement/change in the condition with respect to some amenities of the slum during the last 5 years were collected in this survey through Schedule 0.21.
The main aim of the survey on condition of slums was to portray the condition of the urban slums, both notified and non-notified, with respect to infrastructural facilities like the area where the slum was located, road within and approaching the slum, electricity,
drinking water, sewerage, drainage, garbage disposal, etc. In addition, data on change in the condition of some of these facilities, and source of the improvement, if there was any such improvement over the last five years, were also collected.
Kind of Data
Sample survey data [ssd]Units of Analysis
Randomly selected urban slums based on sampling procedure.Scope
Notes
The National Sample Survey Organisation (NSSO) conducted an integrated survey encompassing various aspects of the socio-economic scenario during July to December 2002. The survey, inter-alia, included the condition of urban slums. Unlike various other surveys conducted by the NSSO where the information is collected from each selected household, information on the civic facilities of the slums was collected from one or more knowledgeable persons from each of the selected slums. This was the third survey on slums after the 31st round (1976-77) and the 49th round (January-June 1993). As the slum is essentially an urban phenomenon, this survey covered only the urban areas.Schedule 0.21 was framed to collect information on the present condition of the slums and on the change in the condition of some facilities available therein. The schedule was canvassed for each surveyed urban block having slum(s). Thus the schedule was canvassed in the urban sector only. Information on each slum, notified or non-notified, found in the entire selected first stage unit (FSU) was collected even if sub-block formation was resorted to. In some cases, the slum covered such a large area that it cuts across more than one FSU, and the selected FSU was part of the slum. In such cases, all the slum particulars recorded was related to only that part of the slum, which fell in the selected FSU. However, if the FSU contained a part of a notified slum with at least 20 households, then the part of the slum falling in the FSU was regarded as a notified slum and the schedule was canvassed accordingly
Schedule 0.21 consisted of eight blocks. Blocks 0 and 1 meant to record the identification particulars of the selected urban FSU. Blocks 2, 5, 6 and 7 contained particulars of field operations, remarks by the investigator/senior investigator, comments by superintendent/senior superintendent and comments by other supervisory officer(s). In Blocks 3 and 4, data were recorded for each slum inside the selected FSU and contains information on ownership, area type, structure, living facilities like electricity, drinking water, latrine, sewerage, drainage, garbage disposal, distance of the slum from nearest primary school and government hospital/health centre. It also provides information on the change in the condition of the urban slums during the last five years along with the sources of improvement of the facilities, if any.
Keywords
Notified slum, Flood risk, Approach Road, Slum dwellers, Living facilities, Garbage disposal, Drainage, NSS 58th Round, Schedule 0.21, July - December 2002Coverage
Geographic Coverage
The survey covered the whole URBAN area of the Indian Union.Producers and Sponsors
Primary Investigator(s)
Name | Affiliation |
---|---|
National Sample Survey Office | M/o Statistcs and Programme Implementation(MOSPI),Government of India (GOI) |
Other Producer(s)
Name | Affiliation | Role |
---|---|---|
Survey Design Reearch Division | National Sample Survey Office | Questionnaire Desgn, Sampling methodology,Survey Reports |
Field Operations Division | National Sample Survey Office | Field Work |
Data Processing Division | National Sample Survey Office | Data Processing |
Computer Centre | M/o Statistcs and Programme Implementation(MOSPI),Government of India (GOI) | Dissemination |
Funding
Name | Abbreviation | Role |
---|---|---|
M/o Statistics & Programme Implementation, GOI | MOSPI |
Other Acknowledgements
Name | Affiliation | Role |
---|---|---|
Governing council and Working Group | GOI | Finalisation of survey study and Questionnaire |
Metadata Production
Metadata Produced By
Name | Abbreviation | Affiliation | Role |
---|---|---|---|
Computer Centre | MOSPI, CC | M | Documentation of the study |
Date of Metadata Production
2012-05-17DDI Document Version
Version 1.0 (May 2012)DDI Document ID
DDI-IND-MOSPI-NSSO-58Rnd-Sch-0dot21-2002