Home Page
 Key words


Ebivvunuddwa:

'العربية / al-ʿarabīyah (1)
'العربية / al-ʿarabīyah (2)
Bahasa Indonesia
Català
English
Ελληνικά
Deutsch
Español
Filipino
Français
Galego
हिन्दी / hindī
Italiano
日本語 /   は
日本語 /   ひ
日本語 /   ふ
日本語 /   へ
日本語 /   ほ
Kiswahili
Português
Русский
Af Soomaali
Srpski
Tiếng Việt
Türkçe
اردو / Urdu (1)
اردو / Urdu (2)
اردو / Urdu (3)

                                        

Other Pages:
Key Words
Modules

Sociology:
Home Page
Lecture Notes
Discussions

Utilities
Site Map
Contact
Utility Documents
Useful Links


Emikutu ku bigambo ebitandika ne:

  A   B   C   D   E   F   G   H   I   J   K   L   M   N   NY   Ŋŋ   O   P   Q   R   S   T   U   V   W   Y   Z


Ebigambo ebisukufu ebitandika ne nyukuta H

by Phil Bartle

Byakyusibwa: Irene Nakasango, Eric Bunnet Kitsa, Jonathan Mwesigwa S.

 

HABITAT

The word habitat refers to where animate things live.

The habitat of certain birds, for example, may be a meadow or forest. A human habitat is more than the houses people live in. It includes settlements such as camps, hamlets, villages, towns and cities.

The word Habitat is often used to refer to the UNCHS (United Nations Centre for Human Settlements) which does not build houses, and to an NGO called Habitat for Humanity which does build houses.

 Català: hàbitat,    Deutsch: habitat,    Ελληνικά: Φυσικο περιβαλλον,    English: habitat,    Español: hábitat,    Français: habitat,    हिन्दी (Hindi): आवास,    Italiano: habitat,    Português: habitat,    Română: habitat,    Srpski: ljudsko,    Türkçe: yaşam alanı,    中文 (Zhōngwén): 栖息地


 

HUMAN HABITAT

A human habitat is not just a collection of empty houses

It is even far more than the physical structures and facilities that can be seen. It is a community of people, all the communal facilities they need: water, sanitation, transport, market, energy, food, health-care, education, security, as well as shelter itself.

 Català: hàbitat humà,    Deutsch: menschliches habitat,    Ελληνικά: ανθρωπινο φυσικο περιβαλλον,    English: human habitat,    Español: hábitat humano,    Français: habitat humain,    हिन्दी (Hindi): मानव आवास,    Italiano: habitat umano,    Português: habitat humano,    Română: habitat uman,    Srpski: ljudsko naselje,    Türkçe: insan yerleşim alanı,    中文 (Zhōngwén): 人类的聚居地


 

HUMAN SETTLEMENTS AND HABITAT

Shelter and human habitat are far more than the technology of dwellings or houses. A house exists because of people and for people. A house alone without communal services, such as access to markets, water and sanitation, enculturation (eg education) of the young, communications, transport, markets and other facilities and services, is useless.

More importantly, a human settlement (rural and urban) is not just a collection of infrastructure, or even of human occupants that are separate consumers; it is a community, (See "Community"), a social organization that involves human attributes: beliefs, concepts, economic and political dimensions, family and other social reproductive institutions, a set of human languages, traditions, aesthetics and processes.

Human settlement development is community development.



 
––»«––
Bw’osaanga ekigambo ekyetaaga okukubaganyaako ebirowoozo, tukusaba . owandiike.
Bw’okoppa ebiwandiikiddwa ku mukutu guno, tukusaba okujjuliza omuwandiisi oba abawandiisi
era obiyuunge ku www.cec.vcn.bc.ca
"Omutimbagano guno guvunaanyizibwa aba Vancouver Community Network " (VCN)

© Obwanannyini 1967, 1987, 2007 Phil Bartle
Endabika y’Omutimbagano ekoleddwaako Lourdes Sada
──»«──
Okukyusaamu okukyasembyeeyo: 2014.12.06


 Home Page