The Exposure, Vulnerability, and Ability to Respond of Poor Households to Recurrent Floods in Mumbai

This paper examines poor households in the city of Mumbai and their exposure, vulnerability, and ability to respond to recurrent floods. The paper discusses policy implications for future adaptive capacity, resilience, and poverty alleviation. The study focuses particularly on the poor households, which tend to have greater exposure and vulnerability to floods and limited ability to respond given the constraints on physical and financial resources. The study seeks to understand the implications of the fact that poor households are more likely than non-poor households to be located in flood-prone areas. The study used the land use maps for the selected flood-prone areas to determine the extent and spread of poor and non-poor households and other types of assets and activities in areas with chronic and localized flooding. Primary data were obtained through detailed household surveys to understand the vulnerability and impacts of the extreme floods of July 2005, recurrent floods and the ability of households to respond and cope. The study examined the option of relocation to flood-free areas and identified factors that influence families’ decisions regarding relocation. The study finds that a significantly large proportion of poor households are located near areas with chronic and localized flooding. These households are either below the poverty line or have low incomes and reside in informal settlements or old and dilapidated structures. Future climate risks are likely to put greater burden on the poor and push them further into poverty unless well directed efforts are made to protect them.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Patankar, Archana
Format: Working Paper biblioteca
Language:English
en_US
Published: World Bank, Washington, DC 2015-11
Subjects:FLOODING, POOR PEOPLE, EARLY WARNING SYSTEMS, COMMUNITIES, RISKS, HOUSEHOLD SURVEY, RURAL AREA, POVERTY LINE, COOPERATIVE HOUSING, STORM, EXTREME WEATHER EVENT, HOUSING UNITS, POOR COMMUNITIES, URBANIZATION, EARLY WARNING, FLOOD PROTECTION, RISK REDUCTION, WEATHER EVENTS, SHELTER, WIND SPEED, SHOPS, PREMISES, DISASTER MANAGEMENT CELL, SERVICES, HOUSING, HEALTH, RELIEF ASSISTANCE, DISASTER, PROJECTS, DAMAGES, TRAFFIC, CITIES, TOWNS, SAVING, DENGUE, DISASTER MANAGEMENT, EXTREME WEATHER, FLOOD‐PRONE AREA, SETTLEMENTS, SAVINGS, RELIEF, AIR POLLUTION, TRAINING, DEVELOPMENT ECONOMICS, DWELLING, FLOODS, UTENSILS, EARLY WARNING SYSTEM, FLOODED, RESIDENCES, GOVERNMENT HOUSING, AVAILABILITY OF DRINKING WATER, DOCUMENTS, COMMERCIAL BANKS, MARKETS, HOUSEHOLD SURVEYS, CLIMATE CHANGE, FIRE, SUBURBS, LANDSLIDES, DWELLING UNITS, BANKS, REINSURANCE, HOUSEHOLD LEVEL, SLUM AREAS, DAMAGE ASSESSMENT, FLOOD‐PRONE AREAS, NATURAL HAZARDS, CASE STUDY, DISASTER RISK, URBAN PLANNING, INFORMAL SETTLEMENTS, BANK, ECONOMIC SURVEY, FLOOD DAMAGE, SLUM, HYGIENE, OCCUPATION, URBAN AREAS, HOUSEHOLD, INFORMAL NETWORKS, DAMAGE, INSURANCE INDUSTRY, WEATHER EVENT, MARKET, WARNING SYSTEM, FLOOD, URBAN DEVELOPMENT, INSURANCE, ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT, SLUMS, LANDSLIDE, APARTMENTS, CLINICS, RISK, INSURANCE COMPANIES, HOUSEHOLDS, POOR HOUSEHOLDS, WARNING SYSTEMS, RURAL AREAS, POVERTY ALLEVIATION, EXTREME EVENT, FACILITIES, HOUSES, LIVING CONDITIONS, INTERVENTIONS, COMMUNITY, EXTREME WEATHER EVENTS, EVACUATION, HOSPITALS, SAFETY, URBAN POPULATION, SHELTERS, SERVICE, CLEANLINESS, RECONSTRUCTION, RISK ANALYSIS,
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2015/11/25251044/exposure-vulnerability-ability-respond-poor-households-recurrent-floods-mumbai
https://hdl.handle.net/10986/23434
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