COVID-19 hit the world’s low-income and informal urban communities hard. The need for resources and relief from the pandemic impact was urgent, but many state and governmental responses were delayed or ineffective. During this critical time, new sets of actors mobilised to respond to the crisis and diverse forms of social protection began to emerge. In some areas, food, healthcare, education, income support and social protection delivery systems were expanded and innovated with ‘temporary’ measures that created new categories of recipients, forms of entitlement and delivery mechanisms. This online IIED Debates event will explore lessons from pandemic relief efforts in two large Indian cities, New Delhi and Jaipur, and four informal settlements in Zimbabwe. We will bring together leading thinkers to ask: how can the lessons inform social protection design and delivery in cities in the Majority World? How can we harmonise social protection delivered by diverse state and non-state institutions in informal settlements? Building on pandemic experiences, our speakers will debate whether civil society organisations should be recognised as infrastructure for social protection in cities that go beyond final mile delivery and whether cities should be prioritised for the deployment of innovative alternative forms of social protection.
Social protection that works for cities: lessons from the pandemic
Name of Organization
International Institute for Environment and Development
Organization Website
Event City and Country
London, United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland
Event Date