Africa’s Urban Risk and Resilience

This Special Issue brings together new synthetic reviews, detailed empirical case studies and practitioner and expert commentary

Abstract

The literature on disaster risk and its reduction in Africa’s urban centres remains limited, despite evidence of disaster risks increasing with urban growth. This Special Issue brings together new synthetic reviews, detailed empirical case studies and practitioner and expert commentary to highlight the multiple ways in which risk and urban development are co-evolving in the region. It broadens understanding about the nature, scale and distribution of urban risks, examining relationships between everyday and disaster risks across scales. Papers in the Issue also interrogate the role of governance processes in driving risks, including strong recognition of the role of social institutions where formal governance structures are incomplete, and the underlying knowledge and power relationships that shape urban risk management. Potential learning from innovation is discussed in the light of the rise of resilience paradigms in urban development as well as the ongoing embedding of international agreements in local agendas that offer the potential to drive forward risk-sensitive urban development pathways.

This paper and Special Issue was supported by the Urban Africa: Risk Knowledge (Urban ARK) programme, funded by the UK Economic and Social Research Council (ESRC) and UK Department for International Development Humanitarian Innovation and Evidence Programme. This Special Issue is an academic output of the Urban ARK International Science Conference held in Lilongwe, Malawi in January 2016.

Citation

Fraser, A., Leck, H., Parnell, S. and Pelling, M. (2017) Africa’s Urban Risk and Resilience. International Journal of Disaster Risk Reduction, Special Issue: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ijdrr.2017.09.050

Africa’s Urban Risk and Resilience. International Journal of Disaster Risk Reduction Special Issue

Updates to this page

Published 1 December 2017