Rural migrants in urban centers: Sources of vulnerability or agents of adaptive capacity?

IF 6.5 1区 经济学 Q1 DEVELOPMENT STUDIES Habitat International Pub Date : 2024-08-31 DOI:10.1016/j.habitatint.2024.103173
Amit Tubi , Agnes Gisbert Kapinga
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Abstract

Research on climate migration is increasingly analyzing not only the role of climate as a migration driver but also migration's adaptive and maladaptive outcomes. However, despite broad recognition that climate-related migration is overwhelmingly rural-to-urban, migration's effects on the vulnerability and adaptive capacity of the receiving urban destinations, many of which struggle to adapt to climate change, have received scant attention. To begin addressing this gap, this study examines how urban planners and policymakers in flood-prone Dar es Salaam, Tanzania's main migration destination and Africa's fastest-growing metropolis, perceive these effects. To this end, we utilize semi-structured interviews to examine three interrelated dimensions: migration's effects on flooding, the potential responses to ameliorate its adverse effects, and migrants' capabilities and the ways the city can harness those capabilities to reduce flooding.

The results show that most planners and policymakers view migration as mainly exacerbating flooding yet also perceive migrants as possessing the potential to contribute to urban adaptation. This potential encompasses aspects recognizing migrants' agency, such as adaptation knowledge and planning skills, alongside ‘physical-economic’ elements linked with the use of migrants as labor for maintaining drainage channels and their contribution to enlarging the city's tax base, which may assist in funding flood-prevention infrastructure. However, the results also point to Dar es Salaam's inaction to exploit this potential, accompanied by a perceived lack of responsibility for advancing adaptation. We conclude by highlighting the importance of adopting a proactive approach to mapping and harnessing migrants' capabilities, ultimately contingent on cities' willingness to assume this responsibility.

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城市中心的农村移民:脆弱性的来源还是适应能力的推动者?
有关气候移民的研究不仅越来越多地分析气候作为移民驱动因素的作用,而且还分析移民的适应性和不适应性结果。然而,尽管人们普遍认识到与气候有关的迁移绝大多数是从农村到城市,但迁移对接收地城市的脆弱性和适应能力的影响却很少受到关注,而许多接收地城市都在努力适应气候变化。为了弥补这一不足,本研究将探讨易受洪水侵袭的达累斯萨拉姆(坦桑尼亚的主要移民目的地和非洲发展最快的大都市)的城市规划者和决策者是如何看待这些影响的。为此,我们利用半结构式访谈研究了三个相互关联的方面:移民对洪水的影响、改善其不利影响的潜在对策、移民的能力以及城市利用这些能力减少洪水的方法。结果显示,大多数规划者和决策者认为移民主要加剧了洪水,但同时也认为移民具有促进城市适应的潜力。这种潜力包括认识到移民能动性的方面,如适应知识和规划技能,以及 "物质经济 "因素,如利用移民作为维护排水渠道的劳动力,以及他们对扩大城市税基的贡献,这可能有助于为防洪基础设施提供资金。然而,研究结果也表明,达累斯萨拉姆并没有采取行动来挖掘这一潜力,同时也认为自己缺乏推进适应的责任。最后,我们强调了采取积极主动的方法来规划和利用移民能力的重要性,这最终取决于城市是否愿意承担这一责任。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
10.50
自引率
10.30%
发文量
151
审稿时长
38 days
期刊介绍: Habitat International is dedicated to the study of urban and rural human settlements: their planning, design, production and management. Its main focus is on urbanisation in its broadest sense in the developing world. However, increasingly the interrelationships and linkages between cities and towns in the developing and developed worlds are becoming apparent and solutions to the problems that result are urgently required. The economic, social, technological and political systems of the world are intertwined and changes in one region almost always affect other regions.
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