Description
business in Asia's no.1 slum area in Mumbai...annual income is above 6.6 billion U.S $..ad life n dharavi
Environmenta l issues in Dharavi
6/30/12
Group Members:
Names Roll nos Mehali Shah 07 Punit Kaur Saini Click to edit Master subtitle style 35 Akash Thokale 44 Nupoor Valia 6/30/12
INTRODUCTION ON ENVIRONMENT AL MANAGEMENT
6/30/12
Environmental management is the process by which environmental health is regulated. Environmental management involves the wise use of activity and resources to have an impact on the world. The most successful
6/30/12 plans are on a Plan, Do,
Environmental resource management
It is a purposeful activity with the goal to maintain and improve the state of an Click to edit Master subtitle style environmental resource affected by human activities.
6/30/12
Scope.
Environmental resources management can be viewed from a variety of perspectives. The environment also involves the relationships of the human environment, such as the social , cultural and economic environment with the biophysical environment.
Click to edit Master subtitle style
6/30/12
Ethical
Environmental resource management strategies are intrinsically driven by conceptions of human- nature relationships. Ethical aspects involve the cultural and the social issues relating to the environment and dealing with changes to it.
Click to edit Master subtitle style
6/30/12
Ecological
“The pairing of significant uncertainty about the behavior and response of ecological systems with urgent calls for near-term action constitutes a difficult reality, and a common lament” Scientific analysis of the environment deals with several dimensions of ecological uncertainty. These includes
:-
Structural uncertainty Parameter subtitle style uncertainty Click to edit Master Stochastic uncertainty.
6/30/12
Sustainability
In, context, sustainability implies that rather than competing for endless growth on a finite planet, development will improve quality of life without necessarily having to consume more resources. The end result should be a symbiotic relationship between the sustaining organization and community, along with the environment.
Click to edit Master subtitle style
6/30/12
Current Paradigm Shifts
In order to adjust to today’s environment of quick social and ecological changes some organizations have begun to experiment with various new tools and concepts. It is important to note that though sustainability of environment resource management has improved , corporate sustainability, for one has yet to reach the majority of global companies operating in the markets.
Click to edit Master subtitle style
6/30/12
Environmental Management In Dharavi
Click to edit Master subtitle style 6/30/12
Introduction
In 1986, the population was estimated at 530,225, but modern Dharavi has a population between 600000 and over 1 million people. Its Click to edit Masterand style drainage location subtitle poor system make Dharavi vulnerable to floods during the wet season. It has over 10000 registered and unregistered businesses. 6/30/12
HISTORY
Click to edit Master subtitle style 6/30/12
In the 18th century, Dharavi was an island. In February 1739, Chinaji Appa attacked Bassein. Before that, he took possession of Dharavi. A dam in sion, adjacent to Click to edit Master subtitle style Dharavi, hastened the process of joining separate islands into one long, tapered mass. Tamil migrants, including Tamil Muslims, Adidravidars and 6/30/12 Nadars started coming into the
Dharavi’s first school was constructed in 1924. It remained the only school of Dharavi for the next four decades. Dharavi’s co-operative housing Society edit Masterformed in 1960s. Click to was subtitle style The Dharavi co-operative housing society promoted 338 flats and 97 shops and was named “Dr. Baliga Nagar.” 6/30/12
LIVING IN DHARAVI
Click to edit Master subtitle style 6/30/12
In Dharavi slum, there are about 86,000 shacks that are a home for 106000 families at an average of 6.2 people per “house”. There are approximately 60 schools and 4 secondary schools, Click to edit Master subtitle style offering basic education. There are 162 taps for water, and 842 toilets. The average is 150 people for one toilet. 6/30/12 “85% of households own a
PROBLEMS FACED BY DHARAVI
Click to edit Master subtitle style 6/30/12
Children play amongst sewage and Doctors deals with 4,000 cases a day of diphtheria and typhoid. Next to the open sewers are Click pipes, which water to edit Master subtitle style can crack and take in sewage. There are also toxic wastes in the slum including hugely dangerous heavy metals. 6/30/12
Sanitation issues: The most obvious and visible are the sanitation issues. the biggest problem affecting the drainage systems is during the monsoon, mainly during the floods. Click to edit Master subtitle style Approximately “18,000 people crowd into a single acre”. Poor working condition: Potters and their families live and work surrounded
6/30/12
Public health: Most housing and 90% of the commercial units in Dharavi are illegal. As of November 2006 there was only one toilet per 1,440 residents in Dhararvi. Mahim creek is widely used by local residents for Click to edit Master subtitle style urination and defection leading to spread of contagious diseases. Water issues: The area suffers from problems with inadequate drinking 6/30/12
GARBAGE AND RECYCLING
Click to edit Master subtitle style 6/30/12
In Dharavi unemployed workers, mainly children sift through and collect 8.5 million metric tons of garbage and trash everyday for recycling and repurposing. Everything is recycled from cosmetics and plastics to computer keyboards. 23% of plastic gets recycled in the UK, in Mumbai it is 80%. They earn around a $ 1 a day for their work. People work in dangerous condotion with toxic substance without protection, this could affect peoples life expactancy.
Click to edit Master subtitle style
6/30/12
Even dangerous hospital waste is recycled. 13 Compound is one of the busiest neighbourhoods of Dharavi. It specializes in recycling. 13 Compound also houses hundreds of people. CEPT estimates that there are approximately 4,902 industrial units in Dharavi, of which 478 are involved in recycling plastic
Click to edit Master subtitle style
6/30/12
GARBAGE A NEW BUSINESS
Click to edit Master subtitle style 6/30/12
If it wasn’t for the ragpickers Dharavi’s would be one giant toxic waste dump. The Acron Foundation India Trust is set to organise these workers and train them in scientific methods of waste handling, segregation and recycling. They want them to be trained in how to handle toxic waste and expertise in recycling goods in a non hazardous way Currently there are some 350 members of the Dharavi Project.
Click to edit Master subtitle style
6/30/12
INDUSTRIES THE 13th COMPOUND
Click to edit Master subtitle style 6/30/12
The district has an estimated 5000 businesses and 55,000 single-room factories. Dharavi a small wonder and a $665 million industry. The workers use a special Click to edit Master subtitle style machine for flattening the iron. The two huge water pipes run all the way through Dharavi and are pierced several times along the way. 6/30/12
Click 1. The chuna and their style to edit Master subtitle containers are made next to each other. The workers used to get Rs 9 per thousand bottles filled. The chuna industry is mainly carried out in homes in 13 compound.
6/30/12
2.Polythene recycling industry:It is highly mechanized industry. Very less manpower (around 2-3) workers are required. The area is approximately 300 sq. ft. Hazardous fumes are created during work which poses a health hazard.
Click to edit Master subtitle style
6/30/12
3.Tin industry:- This is one of the most facinating industry that is in 13th compound. Around 7 people are required with many being Click to edit Master subtitle style from the same family. They require space of around 350 sq. ft. and chemicals like acids for treating the containers. The treated ones are sold with a profit margin of around 15%.
6/30/12
4.Colour industry:- The colour industry was carried out in the far end of 13 compound between the two huge BMC water pipelines. o Nearly no machinary seen. o Lots of water requirement. o Usually family oriented business. o The colours are sent outside for consumption.
Click to edit Master subtitle style
6/30/12
WATER POLLUTION (Mithi River)
Click to edit Master subtitle style 6/30/12
Severe flooding and water pollution of the Mithi River is one of the most serious problems for present Mumbai, and particularly for Dharavi, which is built on low-lying marshlands. The main cause of this massive problem is that Mithi River has lost 54% of its original flow due to slum encroachments, new bridges, construction of the Chhatrapati Shivaji International Airport and the Bandra Kurla Complex.
Click to edit Master subtitle style
6/30/12
Water is a big problem for Mumbai's population, standpipes come on at 5:30am for 2 hours as water is rationed. Click to edit Master subtitle style share one 500 people public latrine. One of the most prominent issues is the water control and pollution. 6/30/12
One of the causes for the flood was the Mithi River. It has lost over 54% of its original flow. Since most of natural mangrove forests have been destroyed, and the river has lost its capacity to absorb all monsoon rainfall water. Additionally, the river is now highly contaminated, as it is used as an open sewer for all kinds of pollutants and garbage. Industries upstream dump heavy chemicals and oils, while the slums dwellers produce enormous amount of sewage, garbage and light manufacturing industrial waste. Click to edit Master subtitle style
6/30/12
AIR POLLUTION
Click to edit Master subtitle style 6/30/12
Air pollution is a significant risk factor for multiple health conditions including respiratory infections, heart disease, and lung cancer, according to the WHO. The health effects caused by air pollution may include difficulty in breathing, wheezing, coughing and aggravation of existing respiratory and cardiac conditions. Individual reactions to air pollutants depend on the type of pollutant a person is exposed to, the degree of exposure, the individual's health status and genetics.
Click to edit Master subtitle style
6/30/12
This creates a lot of air pollution afftecting hundreds of plants and animals. People in Dharavi face this kind of pollution everyday of their lives. This is so normal for the people living in Dharavi that they are almost un affected with its adverse effects. The pollution in Dharavi also has a very strong influence on the areas around it .
Click to edit Master subtitle style
6/30/12
REDEVELOPM ENT PROJECT
Click to edit Master subtitle style 6/30/12
A $2billion development project threatens the recycling district and part of Dharavi. . The locals would prefer small improvements to the existing slum such as improvements in drainage. The value of land is so high that redevelopment is now a real threat. The slum dwellers face 14 story apartments as accommodation as proposed by the cities Slum Rehabilitation Authority.
Click to edit Master subtitle style
6/30/12
This will separate communities and make people work away from where they live. Only people who have lived in the slum since 2000 will be relocated. Current redevelopment projects are densely populated and house lots of people. They are not good for community cohesion.
Click to edit Master subtitle style
6/30/12
Click to edit Master subtitle style
THE DHARAVI PROJECT
6/30/12
The Dharavi Project in Mumbai is an initiative of the ACORN Foundation (India), and is a registered charitable trust. The Dharavi Project is a multimedia project that utilizes artists and social-impact programs to change the living conditions of over 100,000, 'rag-pickers' who are segregating waste in and around the landfills of Mumbai. Its mission is to increase the welfare of rag-pickers.
Click to edit Master subtitle style
6/30/12
Most of the rag-pickers make barely 75-100rupees a day. The hard labour of Mumbai's rag-pickers has ensured a place for Dharavi as one of the largest recycling hubs in Asia. Vinod Shetty is the Director of the ACORN Foundation India, and he is an advocate practicing at the Mumbai High Court. The foundation has also undertaken another initiative - to organise health clinics, programmes and workshops from which young children engaged in ragpicking.
Click to edit Master subtitle style
6/30/12
ECONOMY
Click to edit Master subtitle style
6/30/12
Mumbai is a city full of surprises. The latest surprise in the financial capital is the growing popularity of “Dharavi Tours”. it is a habitat of over 1 million people (about 5.5% of the city’s population). Though most of the goods produced are sold in the Indian markets without a brand name, many of these like embroidered clothes, clay pots, etc are exported worldwide.
Click to edit Master subtitle style
6/30/12
The most dominant industry in Dharavi however is the leather industry. This industry employs thousands of people living in these slums and has an approximate turnover of Rs 120 million. Manufacturers from Dharavi are known to export cheap, but pure leather goods, to many European and Middle East Countries.
Click to edit Master subtitle style
6/30/12
SPIRITS OF DHARAVI
Click to edit Master subtitle style 6/30/12
What makes Dharavi different from other slums is that its inhabitants don’t think of themselves as poor. q Dharavi is a mixed community of Hindus (50 percent), Muslims (40 percent), and Christians, Buddhists, and others. qThis is emblematic of unity among the people living there.
q
Click to edit Master subtitle style
6/30/12
Dharavi is a place where human spirit and enterprise lives and triumphs against all odds. qDharavi is a city within a city. It has its own hospitals and its own schools. qFar more so that in the luxurious apartments of the rich.
q
Click to edit Master subtitle style
6/30/12
INTERVIE WS
Click to edit Master subtitle style 6/30/12
Mr. Abhay Chitins, BMC office.
Ø Ø Ø
What are the major businesses in Dharavi? How do you manage the garbage and the waste? what are the measures to control industrial pollution?
Click to edit Master subtitle style
6/30/12
Mr. Sawalkar, BMC office.
Ø What are the development plans in Dharavi?
So, what is the progress? ØHow are the migrants given residence in Dharavi?
Ø
Click to edit Master subtitle style
6/30/12
Mrs. Shanti, Dharavi resident.
What kind of problems do you face? Ø How safe is your locality? ØDo your daughters study? Click to edit Master subtitle style
Ø
6/30/12
THANK YOUSS
Click to edit Master subtitle style 6/30/12
doc_463911661.pptx
business in Asia's no.1 slum area in Mumbai...annual income is above 6.6 billion U.S $..ad life n dharavi
Environmenta l issues in Dharavi
6/30/12
Group Members:
Names Roll nos Mehali Shah 07 Punit Kaur Saini Click to edit Master subtitle style 35 Akash Thokale 44 Nupoor Valia 6/30/12
INTRODUCTION ON ENVIRONMENT AL MANAGEMENT
6/30/12
Environmental management is the process by which environmental health is regulated. Environmental management involves the wise use of activity and resources to have an impact on the world. The most successful
6/30/12 plans are on a Plan, Do,
Environmental resource management
It is a purposeful activity with the goal to maintain and improve the state of an Click to edit Master subtitle style environmental resource affected by human activities.
6/30/12
Scope.
Environmental resources management can be viewed from a variety of perspectives. The environment also involves the relationships of the human environment, such as the social , cultural and economic environment with the biophysical environment.
Click to edit Master subtitle style
6/30/12
Ethical
Environmental resource management strategies are intrinsically driven by conceptions of human- nature relationships. Ethical aspects involve the cultural and the social issues relating to the environment and dealing with changes to it.
Click to edit Master subtitle style
6/30/12
Ecological
“The pairing of significant uncertainty about the behavior and response of ecological systems with urgent calls for near-term action constitutes a difficult reality, and a common lament” Scientific analysis of the environment deals with several dimensions of ecological uncertainty. These includes
:-
Structural uncertainty Parameter subtitle style uncertainty Click to edit Master Stochastic uncertainty.
6/30/12
Sustainability
In, context, sustainability implies that rather than competing for endless growth on a finite planet, development will improve quality of life without necessarily having to consume more resources. The end result should be a symbiotic relationship between the sustaining organization and community, along with the environment.
Click to edit Master subtitle style
6/30/12
Current Paradigm Shifts
In order to adjust to today’s environment of quick social and ecological changes some organizations have begun to experiment with various new tools and concepts. It is important to note that though sustainability of environment resource management has improved , corporate sustainability, for one has yet to reach the majority of global companies operating in the markets.
Click to edit Master subtitle style
6/30/12
Environmental Management In Dharavi
Click to edit Master subtitle style 6/30/12
Introduction
In 1986, the population was estimated at 530,225, but modern Dharavi has a population between 600000 and over 1 million people. Its Click to edit Masterand style drainage location subtitle poor system make Dharavi vulnerable to floods during the wet season. It has over 10000 registered and unregistered businesses. 6/30/12
HISTORY
Click to edit Master subtitle style 6/30/12
In the 18th century, Dharavi was an island. In February 1739, Chinaji Appa attacked Bassein. Before that, he took possession of Dharavi. A dam in sion, adjacent to Click to edit Master subtitle style Dharavi, hastened the process of joining separate islands into one long, tapered mass. Tamil migrants, including Tamil Muslims, Adidravidars and 6/30/12 Nadars started coming into the
Dharavi’s first school was constructed in 1924. It remained the only school of Dharavi for the next four decades. Dharavi’s co-operative housing Society edit Masterformed in 1960s. Click to was subtitle style The Dharavi co-operative housing society promoted 338 flats and 97 shops and was named “Dr. Baliga Nagar.” 6/30/12
LIVING IN DHARAVI
Click to edit Master subtitle style 6/30/12
In Dharavi slum, there are about 86,000 shacks that are a home for 106000 families at an average of 6.2 people per “house”. There are approximately 60 schools and 4 secondary schools, Click to edit Master subtitle style offering basic education. There are 162 taps for water, and 842 toilets. The average is 150 people for one toilet. 6/30/12 “85% of households own a
PROBLEMS FACED BY DHARAVI
Click to edit Master subtitle style 6/30/12
Children play amongst sewage and Doctors deals with 4,000 cases a day of diphtheria and typhoid. Next to the open sewers are Click pipes, which water to edit Master subtitle style can crack and take in sewage. There are also toxic wastes in the slum including hugely dangerous heavy metals. 6/30/12
Sanitation issues: The most obvious and visible are the sanitation issues. the biggest problem affecting the drainage systems is during the monsoon, mainly during the floods. Click to edit Master subtitle style Approximately “18,000 people crowd into a single acre”. Poor working condition: Potters and their families live and work surrounded
6/30/12
Public health: Most housing and 90% of the commercial units in Dharavi are illegal. As of November 2006 there was only one toilet per 1,440 residents in Dhararvi. Mahim creek is widely used by local residents for Click to edit Master subtitle style urination and defection leading to spread of contagious diseases. Water issues: The area suffers from problems with inadequate drinking 6/30/12
GARBAGE AND RECYCLING
Click to edit Master subtitle style 6/30/12
In Dharavi unemployed workers, mainly children sift through and collect 8.5 million metric tons of garbage and trash everyday for recycling and repurposing. Everything is recycled from cosmetics and plastics to computer keyboards. 23% of plastic gets recycled in the UK, in Mumbai it is 80%. They earn around a $ 1 a day for their work. People work in dangerous condotion with toxic substance without protection, this could affect peoples life expactancy.
Click to edit Master subtitle style
6/30/12
Even dangerous hospital waste is recycled. 13 Compound is one of the busiest neighbourhoods of Dharavi. It specializes in recycling. 13 Compound also houses hundreds of people. CEPT estimates that there are approximately 4,902 industrial units in Dharavi, of which 478 are involved in recycling plastic
Click to edit Master subtitle style
6/30/12
GARBAGE A NEW BUSINESS
Click to edit Master subtitle style 6/30/12
If it wasn’t for the ragpickers Dharavi’s would be one giant toxic waste dump. The Acron Foundation India Trust is set to organise these workers and train them in scientific methods of waste handling, segregation and recycling. They want them to be trained in how to handle toxic waste and expertise in recycling goods in a non hazardous way Currently there are some 350 members of the Dharavi Project.
Click to edit Master subtitle style
6/30/12
INDUSTRIES THE 13th COMPOUND
Click to edit Master subtitle style 6/30/12
The district has an estimated 5000 businesses and 55,000 single-room factories. Dharavi a small wonder and a $665 million industry. The workers use a special Click to edit Master subtitle style machine for flattening the iron. The two huge water pipes run all the way through Dharavi and are pierced several times along the way. 6/30/12
Click 1. The chuna and their style to edit Master subtitle containers are made next to each other. The workers used to get Rs 9 per thousand bottles filled. The chuna industry is mainly carried out in homes in 13 compound.
6/30/12
2.Polythene recycling industry:It is highly mechanized industry. Very less manpower (around 2-3) workers are required. The area is approximately 300 sq. ft. Hazardous fumes are created during work which poses a health hazard.
Click to edit Master subtitle style
6/30/12
3.Tin industry:- This is one of the most facinating industry that is in 13th compound. Around 7 people are required with many being Click to edit Master subtitle style from the same family. They require space of around 350 sq. ft. and chemicals like acids for treating the containers. The treated ones are sold with a profit margin of around 15%.
6/30/12
4.Colour industry:- The colour industry was carried out in the far end of 13 compound between the two huge BMC water pipelines. o Nearly no machinary seen. o Lots of water requirement. o Usually family oriented business. o The colours are sent outside for consumption.
Click to edit Master subtitle style
6/30/12
WATER POLLUTION (Mithi River)
Click to edit Master subtitle style 6/30/12
Severe flooding and water pollution of the Mithi River is one of the most serious problems for present Mumbai, and particularly for Dharavi, which is built on low-lying marshlands. The main cause of this massive problem is that Mithi River has lost 54% of its original flow due to slum encroachments, new bridges, construction of the Chhatrapati Shivaji International Airport and the Bandra Kurla Complex.
Click to edit Master subtitle style
6/30/12
Water is a big problem for Mumbai's population, standpipes come on at 5:30am for 2 hours as water is rationed. Click to edit Master subtitle style share one 500 people public latrine. One of the most prominent issues is the water control and pollution. 6/30/12
One of the causes for the flood was the Mithi River. It has lost over 54% of its original flow. Since most of natural mangrove forests have been destroyed, and the river has lost its capacity to absorb all monsoon rainfall water. Additionally, the river is now highly contaminated, as it is used as an open sewer for all kinds of pollutants and garbage. Industries upstream dump heavy chemicals and oils, while the slums dwellers produce enormous amount of sewage, garbage and light manufacturing industrial waste. Click to edit Master subtitle style
6/30/12
AIR POLLUTION
Click to edit Master subtitle style 6/30/12
Air pollution is a significant risk factor for multiple health conditions including respiratory infections, heart disease, and lung cancer, according to the WHO. The health effects caused by air pollution may include difficulty in breathing, wheezing, coughing and aggravation of existing respiratory and cardiac conditions. Individual reactions to air pollutants depend on the type of pollutant a person is exposed to, the degree of exposure, the individual's health status and genetics.
Click to edit Master subtitle style
6/30/12
This creates a lot of air pollution afftecting hundreds of plants and animals. People in Dharavi face this kind of pollution everyday of their lives. This is so normal for the people living in Dharavi that they are almost un affected with its adverse effects. The pollution in Dharavi also has a very strong influence on the areas around it .
Click to edit Master subtitle style
6/30/12
REDEVELOPM ENT PROJECT
Click to edit Master subtitle style 6/30/12
A $2billion development project threatens the recycling district and part of Dharavi. . The locals would prefer small improvements to the existing slum such as improvements in drainage. The value of land is so high that redevelopment is now a real threat. The slum dwellers face 14 story apartments as accommodation as proposed by the cities Slum Rehabilitation Authority.
Click to edit Master subtitle style
6/30/12
This will separate communities and make people work away from where they live. Only people who have lived in the slum since 2000 will be relocated. Current redevelopment projects are densely populated and house lots of people. They are not good for community cohesion.
Click to edit Master subtitle style
6/30/12
Click to edit Master subtitle style
THE DHARAVI PROJECT
6/30/12
The Dharavi Project in Mumbai is an initiative of the ACORN Foundation (India), and is a registered charitable trust. The Dharavi Project is a multimedia project that utilizes artists and social-impact programs to change the living conditions of over 100,000, 'rag-pickers' who are segregating waste in and around the landfills of Mumbai. Its mission is to increase the welfare of rag-pickers.
Click to edit Master subtitle style
6/30/12
Most of the rag-pickers make barely 75-100rupees a day. The hard labour of Mumbai's rag-pickers has ensured a place for Dharavi as one of the largest recycling hubs in Asia. Vinod Shetty is the Director of the ACORN Foundation India, and he is an advocate practicing at the Mumbai High Court. The foundation has also undertaken another initiative - to organise health clinics, programmes and workshops from which young children engaged in ragpicking.
Click to edit Master subtitle style
6/30/12
ECONOMY
Click to edit Master subtitle style
6/30/12
Mumbai is a city full of surprises. The latest surprise in the financial capital is the growing popularity of “Dharavi Tours”. it is a habitat of over 1 million people (about 5.5% of the city’s population). Though most of the goods produced are sold in the Indian markets without a brand name, many of these like embroidered clothes, clay pots, etc are exported worldwide.
Click to edit Master subtitle style
6/30/12
The most dominant industry in Dharavi however is the leather industry. This industry employs thousands of people living in these slums and has an approximate turnover of Rs 120 million. Manufacturers from Dharavi are known to export cheap, but pure leather goods, to many European and Middle East Countries.
Click to edit Master subtitle style
6/30/12
SPIRITS OF DHARAVI
Click to edit Master subtitle style 6/30/12
What makes Dharavi different from other slums is that its inhabitants don’t think of themselves as poor. q Dharavi is a mixed community of Hindus (50 percent), Muslims (40 percent), and Christians, Buddhists, and others. qThis is emblematic of unity among the people living there.
q
Click to edit Master subtitle style
6/30/12
Dharavi is a place where human spirit and enterprise lives and triumphs against all odds. qDharavi is a city within a city. It has its own hospitals and its own schools. qFar more so that in the luxurious apartments of the rich.
q
Click to edit Master subtitle style
6/30/12
INTERVIE WS
Click to edit Master subtitle style 6/30/12
Mr. Abhay Chitins, BMC office.
Ø Ø Ø
What are the major businesses in Dharavi? How do you manage the garbage and the waste? what are the measures to control industrial pollution?
Click to edit Master subtitle style
6/30/12
Mr. Sawalkar, BMC office.
Ø What are the development plans in Dharavi?
So, what is the progress? ØHow are the migrants given residence in Dharavi?
Ø
Click to edit Master subtitle style
6/30/12
Mrs. Shanti, Dharavi resident.
What kind of problems do you face? Ø How safe is your locality? ØDo your daughters study? Click to edit Master subtitle style
Ø
6/30/12
THANK YOUSS
Click to edit Master subtitle style 6/30/12
doc_463911661.pptx