Socio-economic consequences of post-disaster reconstruction in hazard-exposed areas
Autor: | Anthony Patt, Saiful Mahdi, Jamie W McCaughey, Patrick Daly, Ibnu Mundir |
---|---|
Přispěvatelé: | Earth Observatory of Singapore |
Rok vydání: | 2018 |
Předmět: |
0301 basic medicine
Climate-change Adaptation Geography Planning and Development Population Vulnerability Price premium Management Monitoring Policy and Law 03 medical and health sciences SAFER 0502 economics and business 050207 economics Socioeconomics education Nature and Landscape Conservation Global and Planetary Change education.field_of_study Ecology Renewable Energy Sustainability and the Environment 05 social sciences Geography [Social sciences] Hazard Urban Studies 030104 developmental biology Geography Sustainability Relocation Social vulnerability Natural Hazards Food Science |
Zdroj: | Nature Sustainability. 1:38-43 |
ISSN: | 2398-9629 |
DOI: | 10.1038/s41893-017-0002-z |
Popis: | With coastal populations growing and sea levels rising, reconstruction decisions after coastal disasters are increasingly consequential determinants of future societal vulnerability and thus the sustainability of development. The humanitarian sector tends to favour rebuilding in-place to avoid the social disruptions of mass relocation, yet evidence on what affected people want is mixed. Using the case of post-tsunami Banda Aceh, Indonesia, we investigate whether a policy to rebuild in-place in the disaster-affected area suits an urban population that was previously unaware of the hazard. We show that following the tsunami, a substantial proportion of the population prefers to live farther from the coast. This has caused a new price premium for inland properties and socio-economic sorting of poorer households into coastal areas. These findings show that offering reconstruction aid predominantly within a hazard-exposed area can inadvertently transfer disaster risk to the poor. Post-disaster reconstruction in hazard-exposed areas can increase social vulnerability if a disaster changes where people wish to live. In a post-tsunami zone in Indonesia, the authors find that many people wish to move to safer areas, causing housing prices to go up inland and the poor to live near the coast. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
Externí odkaz: |