Built‑in Flood Risk: the Intertwinement of Flood Risk and Unregulated Urban Expansion in African Cities
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Urban Forum
Abstract
Urban flood risk is significantly shaped by ground conditions and the built environment,
which are constantly modified and transformed by human actions. This
paper examines the intertwinement of flood risk and unregulated urban expansion
processes in three selected sites in Accra’s expanding periphery. All three sites have
been included in Accra’s urban extent since the 1990s, but differ with regard to the
timing of development and socio-economic characteristics of residents. The research
illuminates how flood risk is produced and “built-in” to the urban fabric through
widespread practices associated with unregulated urban expansion processes, especially
the persistent encroachment on water retention areas, wetlands and riparian
zones and the highly fragmented provision of transport infrastructure in emerging
residential areas in the periphery. Such harmful development practices are neither
confined to homebuilders from poorer segments of the urban population nor spatially
concentrated in low-income areas. The research highlights how the actions and
inactions of a wide range of social groups and actors engaged in urban land administration
and development contribute to flood risk in various ways, making flooding
an increasingly alarming issue of citywide concern. Different stakeholders highlight
fragmented urban governance as an underlying root cause for the obstruction of
sustainable land and water management. Overall, the study calls for a more robust
recognition of spatial planning and transport infrastructure provision in flood risk
mitigation and highlights the urgent need for planning and governance practices that
challenge the existing fragmentation of urban governance systems.
Description
Research Article
