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Profiling informal settlements for disaster risks

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conference contribution
posted on 2025-05-11, 14:18 authored by Matthew AbunyewahMatthew Abunyewah, Thayaparan GajendranThayaparan Gajendran, Kim MaundKim Maund
Informal settlements, where mostly the urban poor reside, tend to be located in hotspots of natural hazards such as floods, fire, earthquakes and tsunamis. The devastating impacts of these natural hazards on such settlements can be attributed to the higher levels of physical, economic, social and environmental vulnerability in conjunction with inadequate and poor level of disaster preparedness. Conceptualizing a detailed risk profile, in the context of informal settlement characteristics presents a starting point to which the impacts posed by environmental hazards can be addressed effectively. This paper develops a theoretical framework through literature review coupling the concepts of "disaster hazards", "vulnerability" and "informal settlements". The findings suggest that the policy environment (environmental/land use planning and communication) impacting the informal settlement characteristics (demographic, financial, social/poetical and locational/environmental) is key to managing disaster risk profile in informal settlements. The paper concludes by identifying five theoretical propositions that can assist in disaster preparedness.

History

Source title

7th International Conference on Building Resilience: Using Scientific Knowledge to Inform Policy and Practice in Disaster Risk Reduction (ICBR2017) [presented in Procedia Engineering, Vol. 212]

Name of conference

7th International Conference on Building Resilience (ICBR2017)

Location

Bangkok, Thailand

Start date

2017-11-27

End date

2017-11-29

Pagination

238-245

Editors

Amaratunga, D. & Haigh, R.

Publisher

Elsevier

Place published

Amsterdam, Netherlands

Language

  • en, English

College/Research Centre

Faculty of Engineering and Built Environment

School

School of Architecture and Built Environment

Rights statement

© 2018 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Inc. This is an open access article under the CC BY-NC-ND license.

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