Recovery of Household-level assets: Towards a cyclone resilent community

This dissertation is submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Master in Disaster Management, 2012.

מידע ביבליוגרפי
מחבר ראשי: Samira, Shawly
מחברים אחרים: Department of Architecture, BRAC University
פורמט: Dissertation
שפה:English
יצא לאור: BRAC University 2014
נושאים:
גישה מקוונת:http://hdl.handle.net/10361/3406
id 10361-3406
record_format dspace
spelling 10361-34062019-09-30T03:27:26Z Recovery of Household-level assets: Towards a cyclone resilent community Samira, Shawly Department of Architecture, BRAC University Disaster management This dissertation is submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Master in Disaster Management, 2012. Cataloged from PDF version of Dissertation. Includes bibliographical references (page 79-83). Globally Bangladesh is recognized as one of the most vulnerable countries to natural calamities. Along with cyclones and floods; two most discussed and disastrous hazards of the country, landslides have caused the death of nearly 235 people in various informal settlements of Chittagong city and its adjacent urban centers since 1997. In Chittagong city, about 30 percent of the total population lives in the informal settlements where living environments are quite unsatisfactory and they are deprived of access to basic facilities. The rapid growth of urban population of Chittagong city is fuelled by migration of the rural poor to the city, drawn by perceived chances of finding cash employment in the industrial sector and pushed by the limited opportunities in rural areas. On arrival, many are unable to afford proper housing, so turn to live in informal settlements. Ineffective hill management policy at the national level and weak enforcement by the local authorities has created space for growing many informal settlements along landslide prone hill slopes and foothills in Chittagong city. However, there is no institutional arrangement for vulnerability assessment of those informal settlements to landslides. Few researches on landslide focus on hill cutting issues but are unable to explain the role of formal institutional arrangements for reducing vulnerability of the informal settlers. Neither national level landslide risk reduction organizations nor local level organizations and NGOs have planned and executed any proper structural and non-structural mitigation measure other than conventional stabilization (simple retaining walls) of hill toe and relocation respectively. Besides being more affected by landslides the informal settlers have less willingness to adapt risk reduction measures like relocation. Mostly land tenure conflict, trust, socio-economic status (education, income) and powerlessness inhibit these populations in accepting new institutional arrangements. The growing distrust and conflict has tightened pre-landslide institutional arrangements for reducing vulnerability. However, there is usually no standard rule of thumb solution because formulation of mitigation measure is often unique for each site and requires proper technical evolution of causative factors. This study explores different strategic design measures on the basis of assessment of risk, uncertainty, possible consequences, constructability, environmental impacts and costs. It suggests that, while proposing a specific measure, it is best to keep simple to match the physical characteristics of the hill and the availability of materials. The study makes an effort to contribute in the development of a comprehensive design solution to reduce landslide vulnerability that can be adapted to ensure the settlers immediate safety. Samira, Shawly M. Disaster Management 2014-07-13T07:03:44Z 2014-07-13T07:03:44Z 2012 Dissertation ID 11268009 http://hdl.handle.net/10361/3406 en BRAC University thesis are protected by copyright. They may be viewed from this source for any purpose, but reproduction or distribution in any format is prohibited without written permission. 97 pages application/pdf BRAC University
institution Brac University
collection Institutional Repository
language English
topic Disaster management
spellingShingle Disaster management
Samira, Shawly
Recovery of Household-level assets: Towards a cyclone resilent community
description This dissertation is submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Master in Disaster Management, 2012.
author2 Department of Architecture, BRAC University
author_facet Department of Architecture, BRAC University
Samira, Shawly
format Dissertation
author Samira, Shawly
author_sort Samira, Shawly
title Recovery of Household-level assets: Towards a cyclone resilent community
title_short Recovery of Household-level assets: Towards a cyclone resilent community
title_full Recovery of Household-level assets: Towards a cyclone resilent community
title_fullStr Recovery of Household-level assets: Towards a cyclone resilent community
title_full_unstemmed Recovery of Household-level assets: Towards a cyclone resilent community
title_sort recovery of household-level assets: towards a cyclone resilent community
publisher BRAC University
publishDate 2014
url http://hdl.handle.net/10361/3406
work_keys_str_mv AT samirashawly recoveryofhouseholdlevelassetstowardsacycloneresilentcommunity
_version_ 1814309246366384128