🎓 Class 12Social ScienceCBSETheoryChapter 2 — Human Settlements⏱ ~28 min
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Urban Issues, Conurbation and Million-Plus Cities of India
NCERT India: People and Economy — Unit II, Chapter 2
Living in Indian Settlements: A Mixed Picture
Settlements in India — rural and urban — are dynamic systems. They support life, livelihood and identity, but they also struggle under the weight of population growth, uneven investment and changing economies. This part explores the issues that challenge rural and urban settlements, the policy responses of the Indian state, the emerging idea of conurbation?, and the closely related concepts of suburbanisation, counter-urbanisation and the urban-rural continuum. The part closes with all the NCERT end-of-chapter exercises along with model answers, a chapter summary and a glossary of key terms.
Why Issues Matter
Settlements are not problems in themselves. They are the spatial expression of where people live, work and invest. The issues we describe below — slums, water scarcity, malnutrition, congestion — arise when population growth outpaces infrastructure, planning and equity.
Issues with Indian Rural Settlements
India's rural settlements continue to provide food, raw materials and primary services to the country, but they face deep challenges. Many villages still lack basic facilities — affordable healthcare, primary education, sanitation, safe drinking water, electricity, all-weather roads and connectivity. Agriculture is largely seasonal, leaving rural workers under-employed for several months in a year. Malnutrition? remains widespread, particularly among children and women, and gender disparities in literacy, wages, asset ownership and health continue to mark daily life in many villages.
Key Rural Issues at a Glance
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Healthcare Gap
Shortage of primary health centres, specialist doctors and emergency ambulance services in remote villages.
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Education Deficit
Many small hamlets still lack quality primary schools; high drop-out rates among girls in higher classes.
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Water & Sanitation
Inadequate access to safe drinking water and toilets, especially in arid Rajasthan and tribal belts.
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Electricity & Roads
Patchy electricity supply and poor all-weather connectivity hold back enterprise and emergency response.
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Seasonal Employment
Agriculture is rain-fed and seasonal; many workers face under-employment for several months each year.
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Malnutrition
Children and women in poor rural households remain vulnerable to under-nutrition and anaemia.
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Gender Disparities
Lower female literacy, restricted mobility and unequal wages persist in many rural areas.
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Out-Migration
Lack of opportunity drives long-distance migration of working-age men, leaving aged and women-headed households.
Government Interventions for Rural Areas
To narrow the rural-urban gap, the Government of India has launched a series of schemes — both for income security and for infrastructure. The most relevant for the settlement geography of India are:
Scheme
Year
Core Aim
NCRPB — National Capital Region Planning Board
1985
Plan integrated development of the NCR around Delhi to relieve urban pressure on the capital.
MGNREGA — Mahatma Gandhi National Rural Employment Guarantee Act
2005
Guarantee 100 days of wage employment per rural household in a financial year, building durable rural assets.
PURA — Provision of Urban Amenities in Rural Areas
2003 (revised 2010)
Bring urban-style infrastructure (electricity, water, roads, broadband, education, health) to clusters of villages.
SAGY — Sansad Adarsh Gram Yojana
2014
Each MP to develop one village as a model “Adarsh Gram” with social, economic and environmental indicators.
Jal Jeevan Mission
2019
Provide functional household tap water connection to every rural home (Har Ghar Jal).
Pradhan Mantri Gram Sadak Yojana (PMGSY)
2000
All-weather road connectivity to unconnected habitations of 500+ persons (250+ in tribal/hilly areas).
LET'S EXPLORE — A Village & Its Schemes
L3 Apply
Pick any one village in your district (or the village your family is from). For three rural problems — safe drinking water, all-weather road, employment — identify which government scheme is meant to address each. What progress, if any, has the village reported under those schemes?
Guidance
Drinking water — Jal Jeevan Mission (Har Ghar Jal, 2019); all-weather road — Pradhan Mantri Gram Sadak Yojana (2000); employment — MGNREGA (2005). Local progress can be checked through panchayat noticeboards, the JJM dashboard or the gram sabha; many villages report partial coverage, suggesting that physical infrastructure is improving but quality and maintenance are uneven.
Issues with Indian Urban Settlements
Urban India has been growing fast: from 10.84% urban in 1901 to 31.16% urban in 2011, with the urban population eleven times higher in absolute terms. Migration to cities, the growth of services and the spread of metropolises have, however, created severe stresses. The most visible urban issues today are slums?, traffic congestion, air pollution, lack of housing, water scarcity, deteriorating air quality (AQI), poor solid-waste management, urban poverty and encroachment.
Fig 2.10 — Concept Map: Issues in Indian Urban Settlements
Eight inter-linked urban issues radiate from the same root cause: rapid growth without matching infrastructure and planning.
Slums — The Visible Face of the Crisis
Slums are unplanned, dense, low-income settlements that grow on the margins of Indian cities. The most famous is Dharavi in Mumbai — often described as Asia's largest slum, with an estimated population of around 1 million people living and working in around 2.39 sq km. Other large slum clusters include Bharat Nagar in Bengaluru and Bhalswa in Delhi. Slums are not merely housing failures: they also host vibrant informal economies (leather, textiles, recycling) that supply the formal city.
Fig 2.11 — Approximate Slum Population in Major Indian Cities
Indicative slum populations from 2011 Census and city studies (in lakhs). Mumbai's Dharavi alone hosts close to 10 lakh residents.
Traffic, Pollution and Civic Stress
Indian cities have outgrown their road and transit networks. Average peak-hour speeds in Delhi, Bengaluru and Mumbai often fall below 20 km/h. Vehicle emissions, construction dust, stubble burning in surrounding states and industrial discharges have made AQI values regularly cross 300 in Delhi-NCR during winters. Cities like Chennai have faced severe drinking water shortages (notably the ‘Day Zero’ crisis of 2019), and Bengaluru has struggled with disappearing lakes and groundwater depletion. Solid waste — mountains of garbage at Ghazipur in Delhi or Deonar in Mumbai — is the most visible by-product. Encroachment on footpaths, water bodies and drainage channels worsens flooding, as repeatedly seen in Mumbai and Bengaluru.
Source — Census & Reports (paraphrased)
The 2011 Census recorded that around 17.4% of urban Indian households lived in slum-like conditions. The Government of India accordingly framed dedicated urban renewal missions to upgrade housing, water supply, transport and sanitation.
— Census of India, 2011 (Slum Population Tables)
Government Initiatives for Urban Areas
Recognising the scale of urban distress, the Government of India has rolled out a series of urban missions, especially after 2005. The most important schemes for Indian urban geography are:
Scheme
Year
Core Aim
JNNURM — Jawaharlal Nehru National Urban Renewal Mission
2005
The first comprehensive mission for urban infrastructure, governance and basic services for the urban poor in 65+ mission cities.
Smart Cities Mission
2015
Transform 100 selected cities into compact “smart” replicable models with core infrastructure, smart solutions and sustainable, inclusive development.
AMRUT — Atal Mission for Rejuvenation and Urban Transformation
2015
Improve basic infrastructure (water, sewerage, drainage, transport, green spaces) in 500 cities.
PMAY-Urban — Pradhan Mantri Awas Yojana
2015
“Housing for All” in urban areas; affordable housing through in-situ slum upgrade and credit-linked subsidy.
Swachh Bharat Mission — Urban
2014
Eliminate open defecation, improve solid-waste management and create cleaner cities.
HRIDAY — Heritage City Development & Augmentation Yojana
2015
Holistic preservation and development of identified heritage cities (Ajmer, Varanasi, Puri, Amritsar, etc.).
Fig 2.12 — The Three-Pillar Urban Mission Architecture (Post-2015)
After 2015, India's urban policy was rebuilt around three flagship schemes — Smart Cities, AMRUT and PMAY (Urban) — supported by Swachh Bharat-Urban and HRIDAY.
Fig 2.13 — Approximate City Coverage of Major Urban Schemes
Number of cities targeted under flagship missions: AMRUT (500), Smart Cities (100), HRIDAY (12) and JNNURM (65 mission cities).
THINK ABOUT IT — Smart City or Slum-Free City?
L5 Evaluate
Critics argue that the Smart Cities Mission focuses on a small “area-based” chunk of each chosen city, while the larger problem of slums and basic services remains untouched. Should India invest first in smart, model districts or in universal basics (water, sewer, housing) for the whole city? Justify your view using two arguments.
Guidance
A balanced answer recognises both sides. Smart pockets can act as “lighthouses”, demonstrating replicable models — the official rationale of the mission. But equity demands universal basics first — especially when 17.4% of urban households live in slum-like conditions. The strongest answers argue for parallel investment: AMRUT and PMAY-U handle basics city-wide, while Smart Cities pilots demonstrate the next standard.
Conurbation: When Cities Merge
As Indian cities grow outward, neighbouring towns and their suburbs gradually fuse into one continuous built-up region. This phenomenon is called conurbation, a term coined by the British planner Patrick Geddes in 1915. He used it to describe the blending of several urban areas into one large agglomeration, with shared transport, labour and services.
Definition
A conurbation is a continuous urban region formed by the merging of two or more independent towns and their outgrowths. It is bigger than a metropolitan city but functions as a single labour and service market.
Indian Examples of Conurbations
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Mumbai – Pune
A 150-km industrial-IT corridor along the Mumbai-Pune Expressway, including Navi Mumbai and Lonavala-Khandala towns.
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Delhi – NCR
Delhi merging with Gurugram, Faridabad, Noida and Ghaziabad — one labour, transport and housing market.
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Hyderabad – Secunderabad
Twin cities of the Deccan, separated by Hussain Sagar but functioning as one administrative-commercial unit.
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Kolkata – Howrah – Hooghly
A river-banked conurbation along the Hooghly, with industrial belts at Hooghly, Howrah and Kolkata core.
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Kanpur – Lucknow
Industrial Kanpur and administrative Lucknow connected by rapid road and rail corridors in central UP.
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Bengaluru – Mysuru
IT-driven Bengaluru and heritage-tourism Mysuru, connected by an expressway, fusing into a Karnataka mega-region.
Fig 2.14 — Conurbation: How Indian Mega-Regions Form
A conurbation is the third stage where outgrowths of two or more cities merge into a single continuous urban region.
MAP ACTIVITY — Locating Indian Conurbations
L3 Apply
On an outline map of India, mark and label the following conurbations and the constituent cities of each: Delhi-NCR (Delhi, Gurugram, Faridabad, Noida, Ghaziabad), Mumbai-Pune, Kolkata-Howrah-Hooghly, Hyderabad-Secunderabad, Bengaluru-Mysuru. Use one colour for the core city and a lighter shade for satellite/extension towns.
Guidance
Mark Delhi-NCR in the north, sprawling across UP and Haryana; Mumbai-Pune as a corridor along the Western Ghats; Kolkata-Howrah-Hooghly along the Hooghly river; Hyderabad-Secunderabad as twin cities on the Deccan; Bengaluru-Mysuru as a southern Karnataka corridor. Each illustrates how transport, industry and services pull neighbouring urban centres into a single agglomeration.
Suburbanisation, Counter-urbanisation & the Urban-Rural Continuum
Cities do not stop at the municipal boundary. As metropolises grow, residents move outward in search of cheaper land, larger homes, less pollution and better schools. This outward shift is called suburbanisation?. In some cases, people move further still — back to small towns or rural areas with good connectivity — reversing the long migration of the twentieth century. This new movement is called counter-urbanisation?.
Where the suburb meets the village, a fuzzy band develops — the peri-urban or rurban zone. Here, agriculture, industry and services co-exist; some residents farm while others commute into the city. NCERT describes this as an urban-rural continuum: a gradient from the densely-built urban core to the agricultural countryside, rather than a sharp boundary.
Fig 2.15 — The Urban-Rural Continuum
The continuum places urban core and rural hamlet at two ends, with suburbs, peri-urban and rurban zones in between. People move both ways across this gradient.
DISCUSS — The Rise of Rurban India
L4 Analyse
The Government of India has launched a Shyama Prasad Mukherji Rurban Mission (SPMRRM) to develop ‘rurban’ clusters — villages with urban-style amenities. Discuss in pairs: do you think the rurban model can stop counter-productive distress migration to cities? Identify two strengths and two weaknesses.
Guidance
Strengths: (i) brings urban basics to rural homes without uprooting families; (ii) creates non-farm jobs locally, reducing pressure on slums in metros. Weaknesses: (i) needs sustained funding and skilled local governance, often missing; (ii) without strong inter-village transport, rurban clusters risk becoming isolated ‘islands’.
Conclusion
Indian settlements — from a tiny dhok in the desert to the Mumbai-Pune mega-corridor — are all part of a single, dynamic system. Rural settlements still struggle with deficits in basic services and seasonal employment, while urban settlements wrestle with slums, congestion and pollution. The state has responded with a spectrum of schemes — MGNREGA, Jal Jeevan Mission and SAGY in villages; JNNURM, Smart Cities, AMRUT and PMAY-U in cities. Meanwhile, conurbations are emerging as the new functional unit of urban India, and the urban-rural continuum is replacing the old rural-urban divide. The way forward lies in integrated planning that treats villages, peri-urban zones and cities as parts of one whole.
📝 Competency-Based Questions (CBQ)
Scenario: The 2011 Census shows that 31.16% of Indians live in urban settlements, while a sizable share of urban households are in slums (around 17.4%). The Government of India has rolled out the Smart Cities Mission (2015), AMRUT (2015) and PMAY-U (2015) to address infrastructure, housing and basic services in 100, 500 and most urban areas respectively, while MGNREGA (2005) and Jal Jeevan Mission target rural deficits. Meanwhile, mega cities like Delhi merge with Gurugram and Noida to form a single conurbation.
Q1. Which one of the following best describes a conurbation?
L1 Remember
(A) A small village with mixed land use
(B) A continuous urban region formed by the merging of two or more towns and their outgrowths
(C) A heritage town developed under HRIDAY
(D) A garrison cantonment town
Answer: (B) — A conurbation, a term coined by Patrick Geddes (1915), is a continuous urban region created when two or more independent cities and their outgrowths merge into a single agglomeration, e.g. Delhi-NCR or Mumbai-Pune.
Q2. Match the scheme with its primary aim. Identify the correctly matched pair.
Answer: (C) — AMRUT (2015) targets 500 cities for basic infrastructure: water supply, sewerage, drainage, transport and green spaces. Smart Cities is for 100 cities; MGNREGA is rural employment; PMAY-U is urban housing; HRIDAY is heritage.
Q3. The 2011 Census records that around 17.4% of urban Indian households lived in slum-like conditions. Examine two reasons for the persistence of slums in Indian metropolises and suggest one policy response from the chapter.
L4 Analyse
Model Answer: Two reasons are (i) large-scale rural-urban migration driven by poverty, agricultural distress and seasonal unemployment, which outpaces the formal housing supply; and (ii) high cost of formal urban land, which forces low-income migrants into self-built informal settlements like Dharavi (Mumbai) or Bharat Nagar (Bengaluru). A direct policy response is PMAY-Urban (2015), which targets “Housing for All” through in-situ slum redevelopment and credit-linked subsidies, complemented by AMRUT for basic services and the Swachh Bharat Mission for sanitation.
Q4. Critically evaluate the statement: “Conurbations are the inevitable end-stage of Indian urbanisation.” Use any two examples from the chapter.
L5 Evaluate
Model Answer: The statement is partly true. Wherever a metropolis grows in a region with good transport, neighbouring towns are pulled in: Delhi has merged with Gurugram, Faridabad, Noida and Ghaziabad to form the Delhi-NCR conurbation; Mumbai extends along the Western Ghats corridor towards Pune. So conurbations do appear inevitable for mega-cities. However, smaller cities such as Bhopal or Thiruvananthapuram remain distinct, single agglomerations. Conurbation is therefore an end-stage only for metros and mega cities — not for every Indian town. Counter-urbanisation and the rurban model could even soften this trend by retaining people in smaller towns.
HOT Q. Imagine you are appointed planner of a new mid-sized city of 5 lakh people. Design a three-point strategy to prevent the city from acquiring the “classic” problems of Indian metros — slums, congestion and water scarcity — before it grows further.
L6 Create
Hint — A 3-Point Strategy:1. Pre-emptive affordable housing: reserve 30% of new land for PMAY-style affordable housing along transit corridors, so that future migrants do not need to build slums.
2. Mass transit before private cars: launch a public bus / metro before the city crosses 10 lakh, mirroring the AMRUT focus on transport, to prevent gridlock.
3. Decentralised water and waste: mandate rainwater harvesting, decentralised sewage treatment and recycled-water reuse for parks and industry, building on Swachh Bharat-Urban and AMRUT norms.
✍ Assertion-Reason Questions
Assertion (A): The Smart Cities Mission was launched to make 100 cities provide core infrastructure, a clean and sustainable environment, and a decent quality of life. Reason (R): The mission focuses on compact areas to create a replicable model that can act as a lighthouse for other aspiring cities.
(A) Both A and R are true, and R is the correct explanation of A
(B) Both A and R are true, but R is not the correct explanation of A
(C) A is true but R is false
(D) A is false but R is true
Answer: (A) — Both statements are correct and R explains A. NCERT itself describes the mission's objective and the “lighthouse” idea as the rationale for using compact, replicable areas.
Assertion (A): Delhi-NCR is one of India's prominent conurbations. Reason (R): A conurbation is created when one large city remains entirely separated from its outgrowths and surrounding towns.
(A) Both A and R are true, and R is the correct explanation of A
(B) Both A and R are true, but R is not the correct explanation of A
(C) A is true but R is false
(D) A is false but R is true
Answer: (C) — The Assertion is true: Delhi merged with Gurugram, Faridabad, Noida and Ghaziabad forms the Delhi-NCR conurbation. The Reason is false: a conurbation is precisely the opposite — it forms when towns and their outgrowths merge into a single continuous urban region, not when they remain separated.
Assertion (A): The Indian government has launched MGNREGA, SAGY, PURA and the Jal Jeevan Mission to improve life in rural settlements. Reason (R): Rural India suffers from deficits in basic facilities — healthcare, primary education, sanitation, safe drinking water, electricity, roads — as well as seasonal employment and gender disparities.
(A) Both A and R are true, and R is the correct explanation of A
(B) Both A and R are true, but R is not the correct explanation of A
(C) A is true but R is false
(D) A is false but R is true
Answer: (A) — Both statements are correct and R is the direct cause of A. The schemes are policy responses to the very deficits listed in the Reason: MGNREGA (2005) for employment, SAGY (2014) for model villages, PURA for urban-style amenities and JJM (2019) for tap water.
NCERT Exercises — Full Model Answers
The end-of-chapter NCERT exercises for “Human Settlements” are reproduced below in their original order, followed by complete model answers based on this chapter.
Q1. Choose the right answers from the given options (MCQs).
(i) Which one of the following towns is NOT located on a river bank?
(a) Agra
(b) Bhopal
(c) Patna
(d) Kolkata
Answer: (b) Bhopal. Bhopal grew around the historic Upper and Lower Lakes (Bhojtal); it is a lake city, not a river-bank city. Agra sits on the Yamuna, Patna on the Ganga and Kolkata on the Hugli (Hooghly).
(ii) Which one of the following is NOT part of the definition of a town as per the Census of India?
(a) Population density of 400 persons per sq km
(b) Presence of municipality, corporation, etc.
(c) More than 75% of the population engaged in primary sector
(d) Population size of more than 5,000 persons
Answer: (c). The Census definition requires that at least 75% of male workers be engaged in NON-agricultural pursuits — the opposite of what option (c) states. The other three (density of 400/sq km, urban local body status and population of 5,000+) are part of the definition.
(iii) In which one of the following environments does one expect the presence of dispersed rural settlements?
(a) Alluvial plains of Ganga
(b) Arid and semi-arid regions of Rajasthan
(c) Lower valleys of Himalayas
(d) Forests and hills in north-east
Answer: (d) Forests and hills in north-east. Dispersed or isolated settlements appear where the terrain is fragmented and the resource base of habitable areas is scattered — typical of forested hill country in Meghalaya, Uttarakhand, Himachal Pradesh, Kerala and the north-eastern states. The alluvial Ganga plains have clustered settlements, arid Rajasthan has compact villages around water, and the lower Himalayan valleys have hamleted settlements.
Q2. Answer the following questions in about 30 words.
(i) What are garrison towns? What is their function?
Model Answer: Garrison or cantonment towns are urban settlements that emerged primarily to host military bases, training centres and defence personnel. Their core function is military and strategic. Examples include Ambala, Jalandhar, Mhow, Babina and Udhampur.
(ii) What are the main factors for the location of villages in desert regions?
Model Answer: In desert regions like Rajasthan, the dominant factor is availability of water. Villages cluster compactly around wells, tanks (johads) and oases to maximise the use of scarce water. Defence against thefts and robberies, and the social need for a tight-knit community, also encourage clustered desert settlements.
Q3. Answer the following questions in about 150 words.
(i) Discuss the features of different types of rural settlements. What are the factors responsible for the settlement patterns in different physical environments?
Model Answer: Indian rural settlements fall into four broad types — clustered, semi-clustered, hamleted and dispersed.
Clustered settlements are compact, densely built-up villages with a clear living area separated from surrounding fields. They commonly take rectangular, radial or linear shapes and dominate the fertile alluvial plains, parts of the north-east and the Bundelkhand region of central India. In Rajasthan, scarcity of water has also forced compact clusters.
Semi-clustered (fragmented) settlements show a tendency to cluster within a part of an otherwise dispersed area, or arise when one or more sections of a village live a little away from the main cluster. The dominant land-owning community usually occupies the centre, while lower strata and menial workers settle on the outer flanks. Such settlements are common in the Gujarat plain and parts of Rajasthan.
Hamleted settlements are villages physically split into several units (locally called panna, para, palli, nagla, dhani) that share a single name. The split is often driven by social and ethnic factors, and is typical of the middle and lower Ganga plain, Chhattisgarh and the lower Himalayan valleys.
Dispersed (isolated) settlements appear as isolated huts or tiny hamlets in remote jungles or hill slopes, where extreme dispersion is caused by fragmented terrain. Meghalaya, Uttarakhand, Himachal Pradesh and Kerala are examples.
Three sets of factors shape these patterns: physical features (terrain, altitude, climate, water availability), cultural and ethnic factors (social structure, caste, religion) and security factors (defence against thefts and external threats). Together, they explain why one region clusters and another disperses.
(ii) Can one imagine the presence of only one-function town? Why do the cities become multi-functional?
Model Answer: A pure single-function town is more an idea than a reality. Even small towns labelled by one dominant function (mining, garrison, religious, educational) actually carry out several supporting roles — trade, transport, administration, services — for the people who live and work there. NCERT explicitly says that each town performs a number of functions; functional classification is based only on the dominant or specialised function.
Cities become multi-functional for three connected reasons. First, growth attracts services. As a town grows in size, it attracts banks, hospitals, transport hubs, retail and entertainment to serve its residents, regardless of its original specialisation. Second, scale invites diversification. A large workforce, real estate market and consumer base make it profitable for new industries and services to locate there, layering one function over another. Third, history accumulates layers. Indian cities like Delhi (medieval fort → colonial capital → national capital), Mumbai (port → textiles → finance → films) and Hyderabad (princely capital → pharma → IT) show that each historical era adds a function rather than replacing the old.
As a result, mature metropolises become so multifunctional that NCERT itself notes their functions get so intertwined that the city cannot be categorised in a particular functional class. This is the structural reason behind the “cities are not static in their function” principle.
Chapter Summary — The Big Ideas
Settlement basics: A human settlement is a cluster of dwellings — from a hamlet to a metropolis — where people live and use surrounding territory as a resource base.
Rural vs urban: Rural settlements are land-based and primary in their economy; urban settlements rely on processing, manufacturing and services. Cities and villages are linked through transport and trade.
Four types of rural settlements: Clustered, semi-clustered, hamleted and dispersed — shaped by physical, cultural and security factors. Local terms include panna, palli, nagla, dhani, mauza, dhok.
Census definition of urban: Population ≥ 5,000, density ≥ 400/sq km, at least 75% male workers in non-agriculture, and statutory urban body status — all four together.
Evolution of towns: Indus Valley → Ancient (Varanasi, Pataliputra) → Medieval fort towns (Delhi, Hyderabad, Jaipur) → Colonial ports (Mumbai, Chennai, Kolkata) → Modern industrial & planned (Jamshedpur, Chandigarh).
Six size classes: Class I (1L+) to Class VI (<5K). India had 468 Class I cities, 53 metropolitan cities and 6 mega cities (Mumbai, Delhi, Kolkata, Chennai, Bengaluru, Hyderabad) in 2011.
Functional classes: Administrative, industrial, transport, commercial, mining, garrison, educational, religious-cultural and tourist towns — but cities are dynamic and grow multifunctional.
Rural issues & schemes: Health, education, water, sanitation, employment and gender gaps; addressed by MGNREGA (2005), PURA, SAGY (2014), JJM and PMGSY.
Conurbation, suburbanisation & the urban-rural continuum: Indian cities increasingly merge into mega-regions (Delhi-NCR, Mumbai-Pune, Hyderabad-Secunderabad). Suburbanisation pushes people outward; counter-urbanisation pulls some back to rurban clusters — the future is integrated planning of village, peri-urban and city as one continuum.
Key Terms — Glossary
SettlementA cluster of dwellings of any type or size where humans live and use surrounding territory as their resource base.
Rural SettlementA small, sparsely-spaced settlement specialising in agriculture or other primary activities.
Urban SettlementA larger, compact settlement engaged mainly in non-agricultural, secondary and tertiary activities.
Clustered SettlementA compact, closely built-up village with a distinct living area, common in fertile plains and the north-east.
Semi-Clustered (Fragmented) SettlementA village whose people live partly clustered and partly dispersed; common in Gujarat plains and parts of Rajasthan.
Hamleted SettlementA village split into several physically separate units (panna, para, palli, nagla, dhani) sharing one common name.
Dispersed SettlementAn isolated rural settlement of huts or small hamlets in remote, fragmented terrain.
Mauza / Palli / DhokLocal terms used in different parts of India for a unit of rural settlement or its hamlet (e.g. dhani in Rajasthan).
Metropolitan CityAn urban agglomeration with population between 10 lakh and 50 lakh; India had 53 in 2011.
Mega CityAn urban agglomeration with population above 50 lakh; India has six (Mumbai, Delhi, Kolkata, Chennai, Bengaluru, Hyderabad).
ConurbationA continuous urban region formed by the merging of two or more cities and their outgrowths (Patrick Geddes, 1915).
SuburbanisationThe outward shift of population, housing and economic activity from a city's core to its surrounding suburbs.
Counter-UrbanisationThe movement of people from large cities back to smaller towns or rural areas, often enabled by transport and digital connectivity.
Smart Cities Mission (2015)A central scheme to develop 100 cities as compact, replicable models with smart solutions, sustainable infrastructure and inclusive growth.
AMRUT (2015)Atal Mission for Rejuvenation and Urban Transformation — basic infrastructure (water, sewer, transport, green spaces) in 500 cities.
JNNURM (2005)Jawaharlal Nehru National Urban Renewal Mission — the first comprehensive urban renewal mission for 65+ Indian cities.
PMAY-Urban (2015)Pradhan Mantri Awas Yojana (Urban) — the “Housing for All” mission, including in-situ slum redevelopment and credit-linked subsidies.
SlumA densely populated, unplanned urban settlement with poor housing and inadequate basic services; e.g. Dharavi (Mumbai).
DharaviOne of Asia's largest slums, located in Mumbai, with an estimated population of about 1 million.
Urban-Rural ContinuumThe gradient from urban core through suburbs, peri-urban and rurban zones to rural settlements, replacing the older rigid rural-urban divide.
RurbanA village or village cluster equipped with urban-style amenities while retaining its rural character; the focus of the Shyama Prasad Mukherji Rurban Mission.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is conurbation?
A conurbation is an extensive urban area formed by the merging of several originally separate towns or cities into one continuous built-up zone. Greater Mumbai and the National Capital Region of Delhi are well-known Indian conurbations.
What are the main problems of urbanisation in India?
India's urbanisation faces problems of acute housing shortage, slums and squatter settlements, traffic congestion, water and power shortages, sanitation and solid-waste management failure, air and water pollution, and pressure on urban infrastructure.
What is a million-plus city?
A million-plus city is an urban centre with a population exceeding 10 lakh (1 million). India had 53 such million-plus cities in the 2011 Census, accounting for over 42 per cent of the urban population.
What is urban sprawl?
Urban sprawl is the unplanned, low-density outward growth of cities into surrounding rural areas. It leads to loss of agricultural land, longer commutes, higher infrastructure costs and ribbon development along highways.
What is a slum?
A slum is a residential area with overcrowded, dilapidated housing, lacking basic services such as safe water, sanitation and proper drainage. Mumbai's Dharavi is one of Asia's largest slums.
Which are India's three largest urban agglomerations?
India's three largest urban agglomerations are Greater Mumbai, Delhi and Kolkata. All three are mega cities with populations exceeding 10 million people each.
What is the difference between a metropolitan city and a mega city?
A metropolitan city has a population of more than 1 million (10 lakh), while a mega city is much larger, with a population exceeding 5 million (50 lakh). All mega cities are metropolitan cities, but not all metros are mega cities.
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Hi! 👋 I'm Gaura, your AI Tutor for Settlement Issues, Conurbation & Exercises. Take your time studying the lesson — whenever you have a doubt, just ask me! I'm here to help.