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Modeling the Impacts of Urban Flood Risk Management on Social Inequality

Simon Moulds, Wouter Buytaert, Michael R. Templeton, Ishmael Kanu

2021Water Resources Research62 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The exposure of urban populations to flooding is highly heterogeneous, with the negative impacts of flooding experienced disproportionately by the poor. In developing countries experiencing rapid urbanization and population growth a key distinction in the urban landscape is between planned development and unplanned, informal development, which often occurs on marginal, flood-prone land. Flood risk management in the context of informality is challenging, and may exacerbate existing social inequalities and entrench poverty. Here, we adapt an existing socio-hydrological model of human-flood interactions to account for a stratified urban society consisting of planned and informal settlements. In the first instance, we use the model to construct four system archetypes based on idealized scenarios of risk reduction and disaster recovery. We then perform a sensitivity analysis to examine the relative importance of the differential values of vulnerability, risk-aversion, and flood awareness in determining the relationship between flood risk management and social inequality. The model results suggest that reducing the vulnerability of informal communities to flooding plays an important role in reducing social inequality and enabling sustainable economic growth, even when the exposure to the flood hazard remains high. Conversely, our model shows that increasing risk aversion may accelerate the decline of informal communities by suppressing economic growth. On this basis, we argue for urban flood risk management which is rooted in pro-poor urban governance and planning agendas which recognize the legitimacy and permanence of informal communities in cities.

Topics & Concepts

Flood mythUrbanizationEnvironmental planningContext (archaeology)Vulnerability (computing)GeographyEconomicsEnvironmental resource managementEconomic growthArchaeologyComputer securityComputer scienceFlood Risk Assessment and ManagementDisaster Management and ResilienceTropical and Extratropical Cyclones Research