Managing urban risk: perceptions of housing and planning as a tool for reducing disaster risk
Author
Summary, in English
This paper examines current perceptions within international aid agencies regarding the existing and potential roles of housing and urban development planning as a tool for reducing urban disaster risk in developing countries. It is mainly based on interviews with more than 50 professionals from international agencies and a review of documents on planning and risk reduction.
The paper analyses the correlation between planning and the occurrence of naturally triggered disasters, and argues that this correlation is inadequately considered by international stakeholders elaborating pre-disaster initiatives. It shows that the identified gap between the working fields of planning and risk reduction increases the vulnerability of the urban poor in two ways: 1) actively, through existing initiatives, which only focus on planning or risk reduction; and 2) passively, through the lack of developing initiatives that integrate both fields.
The paper analyses the correlation between planning and the occurrence of naturally triggered disasters, and argues that this correlation is inadequately considered by international stakeholders elaborating pre-disaster initiatives. It shows that the identified gap between the working fields of planning and risk reduction increases the vulnerability of the urban poor in two ways: 1) actively, through existing initiatives, which only focus on planning or risk reduction; and 2) passively, through the lack of developing initiatives that integrate both fields.
Department/s
Publishing year
2004
Language
English
Pages
11-28
Publication/Series
Global Built Environment Review
Volume
4
Issue
2
Full text
- Available as PDF - 260 kB
- Download statistics
Document type
Journal article
Publisher
Global Built Environment Review, Edge Hill University
Topic
- Architecture
Keywords
- developing countries
- disaster risk management
- housing
- prevention
- risk reduction
- disaster
- urban planning
Status
Published
Research group
- Housing Development and Management
ISBN/ISSN/Other
- ISSN: 1474-6824