December 12, 1995



By David C. Korten
The People-Centered Development Forum



The question of whether the Global Action Plan (GAP) of UN Habitat II conference
to be held in Istanbul in June 1996 will recognize the right to housing as a
basic human right has been the most hotly
contested issue of the Habitat II preparatory process. While many NGOs have
been adamant that access to adequate shelter should be a recognized human right,
some governments–most notably the United States–have waged a campaign to
exclude any such language from conference documents. As a consequence there is
no mention of housing rights in the October 13, 1995 draft of the Habitat II
GAP. The housing crisis is real. The United Nations estimates that 100 million
people presently sleep outside with no shelter at all or sleep in public
buildings such as railway, bus, or metro stations. If the definition of
homelessness is expanded to include people living in insecure or temporary
shelters–often of poor quality-the estimate of the world’s homeless rises to
more than a billion. The problem is not limited to Southern countries. In the 12
countries of the European Union, some 1.8 million people sleep on the streets or
depend on temporary public shelters. For the United States, the National
Coalition for the Homeless estimates that more than 3 million people sleep in
the open or in temporary night shelters. The limited available data suggest that
both homelessness and evictions are growing in most Northern and Southern
countries. The U.S. and Indian governments have taken the lead in arguing,
however, that if housing were made a legal right citizens might sue their
governments to provide them with a free house–a burden few governments would be
able to bear. The globalized economy has drained national governments of their
power and resources just as it has drained the power and resources of most
people and localities– leaving them unable to pick up the burden of meeting the
growing range of needs that people are no longer able to meet for themselves.
Consequently, so long as the issue is defined as a choice bet ween looking to
either governments or markets for solutions, governments are increasingly
inclined to favor the market. Yet citizen groups concerned with economic justice
issues have good reason to be skeptical of market solutions–because markets
respond only to the needs of those people who have money. Those who have secure
incomes rarely lack for adequate shelter. It is specifically those who lack an
adequate source of income who bear the burden of the housing crisis.




A CRITICAL PUBLIC CHOICE



The dilemma can be resolved only by moving beyond the assumption that
governments and markets are our only sources of shelter. It is helpful to recall
that throughout history most of the world’s housing has been constructed by the
people who need it, often with the voluntary help of their immediate neighbors.
Furthermore, to this day a substantial portion of new housing, especially in low
income countries, is still being produced on a self-help basis.



Contrary to what some commentators would have us believe, the poor are among the
most resourceful of people. If there is a way to meet their needs, they will
generally find it. When the poor lack adequate housing it is more often the
consequence of being barred from access to the land, credit, and materials with
which to build than a lack of motivation or resourcefulness. Government action
to implement land reform, provide secure titles to land, remove restrictions on
using available local materials for construction, and make credit available are
often the most direct routes to meeting housing needs–what the UN Centre for
Human Settlements calls enabling strategies.



This suggests we must make a basic distinction between the right to be provided
with a house by a governmental agency and the right of access to the means of
providing adequate shelter for oneself. A demand by the able bodied for a free
house is appropriately dismissed as an unwarranted demand for a handout. A plea
for access to the means of providing adequate shelter for oneself is quite
different. It is a call on government to remove the barriers that prevent or
make more difficult the efforts of ordinary people to provide their own
housing–more broadly to create their own means of living. It is a demand that
government act to protect the most basic of rights–the right of access to a
means of livelihood-a means of living–literally the right to live.




CONFLICTING RIGHTS



Properly addressed, the housing rights issue leads to a larger truth basic to
nearly every human settlements problem of concern to the Habitat II conference.
Depriving a person of access to a means of creating a livelihood is essentially
a denial of their right to live–arguably the most basic of human rights, since
without life other rights have no meaning. Yet, in our current world, hundreds
of millions of people find themselves denied access to the land, markets,
technology, money, and jobs essential to creating their own livelihoods.



This exclusion often comes down to a conflict between the property rights of the
few and living rights of the many. For example, when the poor are evicted from
lands they have homesteaded, the eviction is commonly carried out in the name of
protecting property rights of the land owner. Similarly, property rights are the
legal foundation of most other exclusionary processes that deny the poo r access
to technology, money, markets, and even jobs.



Where property rights are widely and fairly distributed they are inseparable
from the right to a means of living. For example, in the early days of U.S.
history farming families owned and tilled their own land and artisans owned
their own tools and shops. So distributed, property rights serve to root
economic and political power in the citizenry as a counter to the potential
abuse of state power and provide the foundation for strong and prosperous
democratic societies.



It is very different in a world in which the net worth of the world’s 358
billionaires roughly equals the aggregate annual incomes of the world’s 2.5
billion poorest people. Under conditions of extreme inequality, property rights
and living rights come into conflict and the free market becomes an instrument
of tyranny rather than an agency of democracy.




LIFE SUSTAINING RESOURCES



Since 1950, aggregate global economic output has increased more than five-fold,
creating comparable increases in the human burden on the planet’s ecosystem. A
growing body of evidence suggests that we are now exploiting our world’s ocean
fisheries, fresh water sources, farm lands, forests, and waste absorption
capabilities faster than the planet can regenerate them. In such a situation,
the continued press for economic growth accelerates depletion of the natural
capital on which the well-being of future generations depends and intensifies
the competition between rich and poor for the natural life-sustaining capital
that remains.



The issues go beyond money–which is often inaccurately referred to as a
resource. We cannot eat, drink, or breath money. Money will not warm our bodies
or shelter us from the elements. Nor will money itself produce any of the things
we need to live. In a money oriented economy those of us who have money can use
it to buy life sustaining resources so long as they are available–food, a piece
of land, building materials, fibers, energy, clean air, water, or the labor and
talent of others–but money itself cannot sustain our lives. This is a basic
point. Money is not wealth. It is a simple number that represents a claim on
wealth.



Money is easily created. Banks do it every time they make a loan. Any local
group can do it, as the growing number of community currency schemes
demonstrates. By contrast, the most important life sustaining resources are
finite. Even those resources that continuously regenerate–such as our air and
water, soils, forests, and fisheries–have a maximum sustainable yield. A
society may chose to allocate the available yield of these resources to those
able to pay the highest price, but money itself cannot increase the natural
yield.



Where property rights take precedence over living rights, money and the rights
it conveys to real resources literally determines whether one has a place. For
example, in Nairobi, the informal and illegal settlements that house more than
half of the city’s population occupy less than 6 percent of the land area used
for residential purposes.\2 Similar illegal settlements provide temporary homes
for more than two fifths of Manila’s population living on less than 6 percent of
the city’s land.\3 The inhabitants of such settlements are subject to the
severe health and psychological consequences of a combination of severe
crowding, inadequate public services, fear of eviction, and sense of being
unwanted people with no recognized place or rights in their own society.



It is not an unwillingness to work. Squatter settlement residents often spend
long hours working or searching for work. Neither is it an absolute shortage of
unused land. Researchers at the International Institute for Environment and
Development in London report that there are vacant lands in most major cities
more than adequate to properly accommodate their homeless populations. In
Greater Bombay the 2,000 hectares of vacant land owned by only one family would
be adequate to house most of the city’s street dwellers and squatters.\4 It is
a matter of property rights.



In a crowded world it is necessary to distinguish between those property rights
that allow a person security in their means of a basic livelihood–which must be
protected–and property rights that represent one person’s exclusionary control
of life sustaining resources beyond personal need–which are of a lower order.



Life sustaining resources are not human creations. They are a common heritage of
all living creatures. There can be no moral justification for society to extend
to any person the right to deny other persons the right to live by monopolizing
a life sustaining common heritage resource they did not create and do not need.



It is even more difficult morally to justify extending such right to lifeless
corporations. Yet a mere 300 of the world’s largest transnational corporations
own some 25 percent–roughly $5 trillion worth–of the world’s total productive
assets.\5 Most everywhere, corporations–especially those involved in
agribusiness, real estate development, and mineral, petroleum, and timber
extraction-are extending their control over the planet’s natural resource
base-in many instances depleting, destroying, or poisoning the renewable land
and water resources that once provided livelihoods for hundreds of millions of
people. The resulting development refugees are left with no choice, but to seek
a means of survival at the margins of the world’s overcrowded cities.



Only natural living things have natural rights. The legal principle that
corporations have the same natural rights as real persons is a pure legal
fiction without moral foundation that arose out of a decision of a corrupted
U.S. Supreme Court in 1886. A legal fiction has no right to deny a real person
the right to a means of living.



ECONOMIC JUSTICE



A study conducted by Friends of the Earth Netherlands asks a basic question:
What would be the allowable annual levels of consumption of environmental
resources and waste absorption services for the average person in the year 2010,
if: a) resource consumption levels were equal among all people living on the
earth at that time; and b) the global level of resource consumption were within
sustainable limits? The resulting per capita consumption levels were then
compared with current consumption levels in the Netherlands.\6 Friends of the
Earth USA subsequently applied the Dutch estimates to make similar comparisons
for the United States.\7 The findings are sobering.



For example, current annual per capita CO2 emissions are 19.5 tons in the United
States and 12 tons in the Netherlands. To meet suggested targets for reduction
of global warming, world per capita CO2 emission levels from fossil fuel use
would need to be brought down to 4 tons by 2010. If the burden of achieving this
target were shared equitably, each person would be reduced in 2010 to consuming
no more than 1 liter of carbon-based fuel per day. This would mean a choice of
traveling 24 km (15.5 mi) by car, 50 km (31 mi) by bus, 65 km (40 mi) by train
or 10 km (6.2 mi) by plane per day–if we were to use our allocation solely for
direct personal travel. These calculations make no allowance for energy needed
to produce, transport, and market the things we consume–burdens we each place
on the environment but never see.



Allowable timber usage, based on an assumption that there will be no more
logging of primary forests and that existing nonprimary forest lands will be
used on a sustained yield basis, would be 0.4 cubic meters per person per
year–including wood used for paper. To bring consumption into line with
equitable sustainable use, the Netherlands would have to reduce its timber
consumption by 60 percent, the United States by 79 percent.



Such calculations are at best preliminary approximations based on controversial
assumptions and the use of fragmented and often unreliable data. They do put to
rest, however, the dangerous illusion that we can at once increase the physical
consumption of the already well-to-do and at the same time eliminate the
deprivation of the poor. Justice requires that we all learn to live on no more
than our rightful personal share of nature’s life sustaining resources so that
all may live. This will require dramatic changes in how we think about the
function and organization of human settlements.



Official delegates to Habitat II appropriately resist making housing a public
entitlement. However, they have a compelling public duty to acknowledge that the
world’s housing crisis is a direct result of public laws and practices that in
nearly every country in the world systematically deny the majority of people
access to their rightful share of earth’s life sustaining resources so that
members of a small privileged minority may accumulate wealth beyond their
rightful needs. The real issue goes well beyond housing rights. It is about
justice in a finite world, learning to live in balance with the earth, and the
right of all people to create a livelihood for themselves and their families.
Habitat II is an appropriate time for the world’s governments to acknowledge the
real issue and begin forging appropriate enabling strategies.




NOTES



1. UNCHS, An Urbanizing World: Global Report on Human Settlements 1996 (London:
Oxford University Press, May 1996), in draft.



2. Graham Alder, "Tackling Poverty in Nairobi’s Informal Settlements:
Developing an Institutional Strategy," Environment and Urbanization (Vol.
7, No. 2), October 1995.



3. Anawim, published by the Share and Care Apostolate for Poor Settlers, Manila,
Vol. IV, No. 4, 1990.



4. David Satterthwaite, personal communication, December 12, 1995.



5. "A Survey of Multinationals: Everybody’s Favourite Monsters," The
Economist
, March 27, 1993, special supplement, p. 6.



6. Manus van Brakel and Maria Buitenkamp, "Sustainable Netherlands: A
Perspective for Changing Northern Lifestyles," Milieudefensie, Damrak 26,
1012 LJ Amsterdam, Netherlands, May 1992.



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