Climate Risk and Vulnerability Assessment in Informal Settlements of the Global South: A Critical Review
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. PRISMA 2009 and Selection of Resources
2.1.1. Defining Objective and Research Question
- What are the climate risk factors contributing to climate risks for human settlements?
- What vulnerabilities do informal settlements have towards these identified climate risk factors?
- What levels of impact do these climate risk factors have on the vulnerabilities of informal settlements?
2.1.2. Defining Inclusion and Exclusion Criteria
2.1.3. Search Strategy to Identify Scholarly Journal Documents and Web-Based Releases
2.1.4. Screening, Eligibility Check, and Inclusion of Resources
2.2. Content Analysis and Data Extraction
2.2.1. Preparation
2.2.2. Organization
2.2.3. Reporting
3. Results and Discussion
3.1. The Research Gap: Climate Risks for Informal Settlements
3.2. Content Analysis of the Sources for Climate Risks, Vulnerabilities of Informal Settlements, and Climate Risk Impact on the Vulnerabilities
3.2.1. Descriptive Analysis
3.2.2. Climate Risk Factors, Vulnerabilities, and Impact Level
3.3. Addressing the Gap: Adapting Climate Risk Findings to Informal Settlements
4. Conclusions
5. Limitations and Future Research
Author Contributions
Funding
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
Appendix A. Content Analysis of Scholarly Journal Documents (Scopus and ScienceDirect) (N = 28)
Document Code | City–Country Focused | Region (Global North/Global South) | Type of Settlement Discussed (Formal/Informal) | Climate Risk Map (Yes/No) | Objective 1: Climate Risk Factors (and Specific Terms Mentioned) | Objective 2, F/IS Vulnerabilities | Objective 3, CRF Level of Impact on F/IS Vulnerabilities | Mitigation Measures | Source |
Scopus database documents | |||||||||
1 | Bhutan | Global South | Informal | No | Temperature, precipitation | Low adaptive capacity, inadequate housing, lack of basic services, poor health conditions | Temperature: direct impact on health risks, inadequate housing, and poor health conditions. Precipitation: indirect impact on inadequate housing and poor health conditions | Education and income generating programs, resource economizing, and improvement in public services | [43] |
2 | Accra, Ghana | Global South | Informal | No | Floods, droughts | Poor housing conditions, inadequate infrastructure, limited access to basic services, poor health outcomes | Floods: direct impact on health outcomes and inadequate infrastructure. Droughts: direct impact on decreased agricultural productivity. Indirect impact on health outcomes through limited access to basic services | Community-based adaptation strategies, provision of basic services, improvement in housing conditions, disaster risk reduction measures | [44] |
3 | Taiwan | Global North | Formal | Yes | Landslides | Vulnerability of urban infrastructure, including buildings, transportation systems, and energy infrastructure | Direct impact on the landslide-prone area infrastructure, with potential for cascading effects on other systems, direct impact on life risk | Monitoring and modeling of the landslide-prone area, evaluation of landslide susceptibility, implementation of mitigation measures such as slope stabilization and drainage improvement | [45] |
4 | Lusaka, Zambia | Global South | Informal | No | Floods | Poor housing conditions, health risks | Direct impact of floods on health risks and poor housing conditions | Policy measures to improve informal settlement residents’ ability to adjust and recover from impacts of the flood disasters and reducing social vulnerabilities | [46] |
5 | San Diego-Tijuana, USA and Mexico | Global North and Global South | General | Yes | Slope instability, increased flooding due to extreme storm events, heat and rainfall extremes | Health risks, shelter vulnerability, mobility issues | Indirect impact on health due to heat. Floods direct impact on settlement and thus exacerbating health | Construction of a binational social vulnerability index (BSVI) for climate planning of community; considers both political and ecological systems | [47] |
6 | Cape Town, South Africa | Global South | Informal | No | Floods | Damage to housing, infrastructure, and health | Direct impact of floods on housing, infrastructure, and health | Policy measures to improve water drainage and infrastructure, upgrade informal settlements, and provide early warning systems for floods | [48] |
7 | Five coastal regions of Venezuela | Global South | General | No | Sea level rise, seawater surface temperature increase, extreme meteorological events (heavy rains, storms), landslide | Damage to hygiene, sanitation, infrastructures, houses, and other services of the communities that are vulnerable | Indirectly affecting services but directly affecting houses due to landslide | Implementation of regional climate risk management incorporating vulnerability and impact assessments into coastal planning and management | [49] |
8 | Latin America (Brazil, Colombia, Ecuador, and Guatemala.) | Global South | General | No | Flood, drought, landslide | Poverty, poor sanitation, poor hygiene due to water pollution | Flood’s direct impact on sanitation and hygiene. Direct impact of drought on lack of water and indirect impact on hygiene. Landslide’s direct impact on settlements | Sustainable management of climate risks | [50] |
9 | Beirut, Lebanon | Global South | Informal | No | sea level rise, storm surges, flooding, erosion, and coastal hazards | Poor housing conditions, poor services like economic ones, poor sanitation and hygiene, health risks | Direct impact of sea level rise, flooding and storms on sanitation and hygiene. Direct impact of flooding and storm on infrastructure, indirect impact of sea level rise on infrastructure | Sustainable design concepts and strategies for upgrading vulnerable coastal areas, including green infrastructure, sustainable drainage systems, and coastal protection measures | [51] |
10 | Australia | Global North | Formal | No | Heatwaves, bushfires, storms, floods, sea level rise, drought | Water and energy supply disruption | Direct impact of storms and floods on water and other facilities’ disruption as well as health. Drought has an indirect impact on health-related vulnerabilities of settlements | Policy measures to improve building codes and standards, promote green and blue infrastructure, and increase community resilience to climate risks | [52] |
11 | Dhaka, Bangladesh | Global South | General | No | Floods | Lack of basic services, poor housing | Direct impact of flood on lack of services and poor housing to exacerbate them | Integration of macro-level efforts with micro-level responses to achieve meaningful longer-term resilience | [53] |
12 | Kathmandu and Nawalpur, Nepal | Global South | Informal | No | Temperature, rainfall, | Lack of basic resources, poor housing | Low impact of temperature on basic resources and housing conditions but high impact on exacerbating other climate risk factors. Indirect impact of rainfall on both vulnerabilities | Livelihood diversification, improved infrastructure, health facilities, social capital, contextual policies, and interventions | [41] |
13 | Kampala, Uganda | Global South | Informal | No | Floods, droughts, rising temperatures, and rainfall | Poor housing, poor access to services | direct impact of floods on housing, infrastructure, and health in informal settlements due to higher frequency and impact | improve housing and livelihoods in slum settlements, building climate change awareness, restoration of critical ecosystems, and a broader inclusive adaptation planning to build resilient urban poor communities | [54] |
14 | Latin America and Caribbean (Haiti, Cuba, Chile, and Colombia) | Global South | Informal | No | Floods, sea level rise, heat waves, droughts | Health risks, infrastructure, and poor services | Indirect impact of sea level rise on health-related vulnerability | Understanding local narratives of risk is crucial for the integration of climate and social agendas in the region | [38] |
15 | Jaffna Peninsula, Sri Lanka | Global South | General | No | Sea level rise | Vulnerability of coastal settlements | Projected inundation of houses under different sea level rise scenarios, results in flooding and therefore indirectly impacting settlements | Identification of areas likely to be impacted and adaptation planning for coastal communities | [55] |
16 | Port Harcourt, Yenagoa, and Warri—Nigeria | Global South | General | No | Rainfall, flood | Risk of flooding in settlements along the River Niger and its tributaries | Increasing/direct risk of flooding within the projected periods on settlements | Formulation and planning of flood mitigation and adaptation measures | [56] |
17 | South Africa | Global South | General | No | Heatwaves, drought, flooding, and sea level rise | inadequate infrastructure | Direct and indirect impacts of climate change on housing, health, and socioeconomic systems | Improved infrastructure and service delivery, early warning systems, community-based adaptation, and sustainable land use planning | [57] |
18 | USA | Global North | Formal | No | Identification of the most suitable relocation sites for climate-vulnerable populations using the Relocation Suitability Index, against climate risks like riverine floods, mudslides, heat, storm, sea level rise, drought, precipitation | Vulnerability to health risk and infrastructure of the settlements | N/A | Development of a Relocation Suitability Index to identify suitable relocation sites for climate-vulnerable populations | [58] |
19 | Sub-Saharan Africa | Global South | General | Yes | Increased temperatures, extreme heat events, changes in rainfall patterns, sea level rise, and increased frequency of natural disasters | Poor water access, human health | Indirect impact of temperature on health and some impact on water scarcity | Policy measures to improve agricultural practices, infrastructure, and early warning systems for natural disasters; investment in alternative livelihoods and social protection measures | [59] |
20 | Germany | Global North | Formal | No | Urban heat islands-temperature | Vulnerability of urban settlements to heat stress | Indirectly exacerbating the impact of heat stress on health risks available in settlements, also an impact on energy consumption, and infrastructure | Implementation of adaptation measures such as high-reflectivity materials, green roofs, and transformation of impervious surfaces into pervious surfaces | [60] |
21 | Dhaka, Bangladesh | Global South | Informal | No | Floods, storm surges, heat waves | Poor infrastructure, lack of public services | Direct impacts of floods and storms on housing, infrastructure, health, and livelihoods | Policy measures to improve water management, strengthen infrastructure, and enhance community resilience, including early warning systems, improved drainage, and sustainable land use planning | [61] |
22 | Australia | Global North | Formal | No | Sea level rise | Infrastructures and vulnerable settlements | Indirect impact by creating floods | Tailored approaches to identifying adaptation options for different scales of settlement and infrastructure studies | [62] |
23 | Southeast Queensland, Australia | Global North | Formal | No | Sea level rise, storm surge events | Vulnerability of coastal settlements to sea level rise and storm surge events | Direct impact of storms and floods on physical infrastructure, health, sanitation and hygiene, and other vulnerable facilities | Greater levels of planning and policy integration across sectors and scales | [63] |
24 | Coastal Australia | Global South | Formal | No | Sea level rise, changed weather patterns | Vulnerability of coastal settlements to sea level rise and changed weather patterns | Sea level rise impact on severe floods and thus directly impacting the settlements | Holistic adaptation strategies, changing planning controls for climate risk | [64] |
25 | Metropolitan New Jersey, USA | Global North | Formal | No | Flooding, droughts, heatwaves, hurricanes, storms | Infrastructure and health risks of settlements | Direct impact of flooding on infrastructure and health of the settlements’ residents | Need for further specification of significant impacts and vulnerabilities both within and across suburban areas, articulation of additive or synergistic qualities of these impacts, and determination of factors that influence suburban adaptive capacity and resilience | [65] |
26 | Multiple cities and settlements in Africa | Global South | General | No | Floods, drought, temperature change, sea level rise | Sanitation, hygiene, health risks, poor settlement condition | Varying levels of impact on different types of settlements, including increased vulnerability, poor sanitation, food shortages, and conflicts. Indirect impact of temperature on health risks and diseases of settlements. Direct impact of flooding on the vulnerable condition of the settlements | Coastal defenses, renewable energy development, improved sanitation and hygiene procedures, adaptive agricultural practices, and water resource management systems | [66] |
ScienceDirect database documents | |||||||||
27 | Small coastal cities in USA, Australia, Bangladesh, and South Africa (regional) | General | Formal | No | Sea level rise, storminess, tides, inland flooding, river flow | Vulnerable homes | Indirect impact of sea level rise on poor condition of homes by producing floods and impacting them | Technologically advanced solutions, governance and capacity building solutions, and regional adaptation planning efforts | [67] |
28 | Low- and middle-income countries (regional) | Global South | Informal | No | Floods, landslides, sea level rise, storms surges, temperature change | Poor housing conditions and locations, lack of water, poor sanitation, poor hygiene, healthcare, and other services | Temperature changes exacerbate the existing chronic diseases in informal settlements, floods (directly) and landslides (indirectly) exacerbate the vulnerable and poor sanitation and hygiene conditions in informal settlements | Community and city-led upgrading of settlements, investment in infrastructure, implementation of early warning systems, and strengthening social networks. These measures need to be supported by policies and regulations that recognize the needs of informal settlements, increased financing, and technical assistance | [9] |
Appendix B. Content Analysis of Web-Based Releases Identified through Google Search and Snowballing (Climate Risk Map, Reports, and Policy Documents) (N = 41)
Map Code | City–Country Focused | Region (Global North/Global South) | Type of Settlement Discussed (Formal/ Informal) | Objective 1: Climate Risk Factors Described in the Map | Objective 2, F/IS Vulnerabilities | Objective 3, CRF Level of Impact on F/IS Vulnerabilities | Indicators/Elements/Input Layers Accumulated for Analysis | Dataset Format | Methodology Used | Analysis Scale (Meso-Regional, Micro-City and Urban, Global) (Population: Low Density, High Density) | Mitigation Measures/ Recommendations | Source | Map (refer to Appendix C) |
Web-based releases (climate risk maps) identified and included through snowballing (N = 23). | |||||||||||||
001 | London, UK | Global North | Formal | Flood risk map | Poor condition of settlements and services | Direct impact of floods on the vulnerable status of poor settlement conditions, thus impacting the infrastructures and people within | Ages under 5, ages over 75, English proficiency, income deprivation, social renters, BAME, surface water flood risk, green/blue land cover, PM2.5, NO2, areas of deficiency in access to public open space | Tabular, vector, and raster | Spatial analysis using ArcMap 10.8. (Population density analysis, land cover classification and terrain analysis, raster calculator and overlay analysis of available data) | Micro scale city, high density population (5390/km²) (Word Bank, 2021) | Insurance and property level measures, income increment and English language literacy provision for vulnerable parties, earlier flood warning dispatch, increase in greenery | [33] | Available |
002 | London | Global North | Formal | Heat risk | Poor condition of settlements and services | Indirect but significant impact of heat on the vulnerable status of poor sanitation, hygiene, and health risk of settlements. Low impact on housing condition. | Ages under 5, ages over 75, English proficiency, income deprivation, social renters, BAME, average land surface temperature, PM2.5, NO2, tree canopy cover, areas of deficiency in access to public open space | Tabular, vector, and raster | Spatial analysis using ArcMap 10.8. (Population density analysis, land cover classification and terrain analysis, raster calculator and overlay analysis of available data) | Micro scale city, high density population (5390/km²) (Word Bank, 2021) | Insurance and property level measures, income increment and English language literacy provision for vulnerable parties, earlier heatwave warning dispatch, increase in greenery | [33] | Available |
003 | India | Global South | General | Cyclone, drought, and flood | Poor condition of settlements, health risk | Direct impacts of floods that exacerbates the vulnerable condition of settlements | Frequency and intensity of extreme events and their associated events, land use and land cover, elevation, slope, ground water, soil moisture, district disaster management plans, gross district domestic product, literacy rate, sex ratio, availability and accessibility to critical infrastructure, availability of disaster-ready shelters, population density | Tabular, vector, and raster | Content analysis of data, AHP analysis, pairwise comparison, Pentad decadal analysis, spatial analysis using GIS (overlay analysis) | Mesoscale, high density population (455/km²) (ONS, 2021) | Develop Climate Risk Atlas (CRA), establish climate-risk commission, climate-sensitivity-led landscape restoration, integrate climate risk profiling with infrastructure planning, climate risk-interlinked adaptation financing | [68] | Available |
004 | USA | Global North | Formal | Sea level rise | Poor house conditions, hygiene, sanitation, or health risks. | Indirect impact of sea level rise on settlements by causing floods, direct impact on sanitation and hygiene | Sea level rise history, storm surge data, with digital elevation models, and population data | Tabular, vector, raster, Web-based mapping formats | Remote sensing-based analysis (satellite imagery analysis for vulnerabilities, vegetation, land cover; LIDAR and digital elevation modeling) and statistical modeling (regression analysis for identifying relationship between sea level rise and other factors; GIS mapping and spatial data visualization; Monte Carlo simulation) | Mesoscale, low-density population (36/km²) (USCB, 2021) | Provision of flood investment protection and flood insurance to population living along coastline | [69] | Available |
005 | USA | Global North | Formal | Cyclones (hurricanes and typhoons) | Vulnerable settlements, lack of basic services like insurance, etc., health risks | Cyclones have direct impact on all types of vulnerabilities of settlements, for instance, health, sanitation, hygiene, poor house conditions, poor water access | Cumulative wind velocity from recorded cyclones over the period 1980–2016, cyclone tracks, storm surges, costal elevation, population density, and infrastructure | Tabular, vector, raster, and NetCDF | Cyclone tracking and intensity analysis, storm surge analysis, infrastructure and population exposure analysis using GIS, climate modeling, and risk assessment | Mesoscale, low-density population (36/km²) (USCB, 2021) | Provision of awareness and support to vulnerable population, improving infrastructures | [69] | Available |
006 | USA | Global North | Formal | Extreme rainfall | Vulnerable settlements, lack of basic services like insurance, etc. | Indirect impact of rainfall on settlements by causing floods, direct impact on sanitation, hygiene, and health risks | Number of historical floods, the frequency of future heavy rainfall events, the intensity of prolonged periods of heavy rainfall, topographic data, land use and land cover data | Tabular, vector, raster, and NetCDF | Statistical analysis (frequency analysis and extreme value analysis), hydrological modeling, GIS-based multi-criteria analysis, machine learning algorithms and its predictive modeling | Mesoscale, low-density population (36/km²) (USCB, 2021) | Provision of awareness, protection, and support to the vulnerable communities with history of extreme rainfall, improving the infrastructures and preparations | [69] | Available |
007 | USA | Global North | Formal | Water stress | Limited access of water vulnerability of settlements | Direct impact on the vulnerable drought situation of settlements | Water supply data (precipitation, temperature, surface and ground water data), water demand data (demographic and administrative data), land use and land cover data, climate model output data | Tabular, vector, raster, and NetCDF | Spatial join, zonal statistics, land use and land cover analysis, climate risk analysis | Mesoscale, low-density population (36/km²) (USCB, 2021) | Provision of sufficient water for communities with younger population, low-income communities, and agriculture, provision of water for those with insufficient water | [69] | Available |
008 | USA | Global North | Formal | Heat stress | Health risks such as heat stroke, dehydration, and respiratory problems | Heat risks directly impacting the vulnerable conditions of the households and then indirectly exacerbating the existing health situation of the residents | Frequency and severity of hot days, average temperature, humidity data, population data, land cover data, elevation data, vegetation data, health data | Tabular, vector, raster, and NetCDF | Time series analysis, trend analysis, extreme value analysis, land surface temperature analysis, urban heat island analysis, dew point analysis, and wet-bulb globe temperature analysis | Mesoscale, low-density population (36/km²) (USCB, 2021) | Provision of cooling facilities for the lower-income and at-risk communities, improving health facilities, provision of better infrastructure, and protecting them | [69] | Available |
009 | Bangladesh | Global South | General | Cyclone | Vulnerable settlements, lack of basic services like insurance, etc., health risks, sanitation, hygiene, poor housing conditions | Cyclones have direct impact on all types of vulnerabilities of settlements, for instance, health, sanitation, hygiene, poor house conditions, poor water access | Cyclone tracks, storm surge, wind speed, population density, land cover, infrastructure, elevation, soil type | Raster and vector | Weighted analysis using GIS | Mesoscale, high-density population (1106/km²) (World Bank, 2021) | Early warning systems, cyclone shelters, infrastructure protection, coastal protection, building codes, community-based adaptation, insurance schemes | [70] | Available |
010 | Sydney (New South Wales) | Global North | Formal | Riverine flooding, bushfire, surface water flooding, coastal inundation, extreme wind | Vulnerable settlement areas and infrastructure | Direct impact of floods on settlements and other infrastructures and services | Temperature data, precipitation data, fire danger index, land cover data, proximity to coastline, population density, infrastructure data, socioeconomic data | Tabular, vector, raster, Web-based mapping formats | Spatial analysis, weighted overlay, classification, interpolation, statistical analysis, participatory mapping | Mesoscale, low-density population (10.26/km²) (Greater Sydney Commission, 2021; Australian Bureau of Statistics, 2021) | Renewable energy, energy efficiency, nature-based solutions, climate adaptation plans, climate-resilient administrative policy, sustainable land use, public awareness and education | [71] | Available |
011 | World | Global | General | Storms (hurricanes, typhoons, cyclones), floods, heatwaves, precipitation, landslides, strong wind, wildfire | Poor conditions of houses, hygiene, sanitation, health risks, etc. | Storms and floods inflict direct impact on all types of vulnerabilities, temperature inflicts indirect impact by exacerbating the situation of rainfall and other climate risks and thus indirectly impacting the vulnerable poor conditions of houses, health, etc. | Climate data (temperature, precipitation, and wind speed), exposure data (people and assets exposed to climate hazards such as floods, storms, and heatwaves), socioeconomic data (social and economic vulnerability of populations to climate risks), historical disaster data (frequency and intensity of climate-related disasters over the past two decades) | Tabular, vector, raster, and NetCDF | Multi-criteria decision analysis, weightage analysis, statistical analysis | Global | Invest in early warning systems and disaster risk reduction, develop and implement climate-resilient administrative and building codes, support climate-resilient livelihoods and economic activities, improve access to climate finance and technology transfer, strengthen international cooperation and collaboration | [72] | Available |
012 | Nepal | Global South | General | Avalanches, floods, heavy rainfall, and landslides | Poor housing conditions, hygiene, sanitation, and health risks | Direct impact of avalanches and floods that exacerbate the existing vulnerabilities of settlements such as poor housing conditions, hygiene, sanitation, and health risks | Avalanches (snow depth, snow density, slope, aspect, terrain roughness), floods (river flow rates, precipitation patterns, topography, and soil types), rainfall (historical and projected rainfall data), landslide (slope stability, geology, rainfall patterns, and vegetation cover) (DHM, 2023) | Tabular, vector, raster | Terrain analysis, hydraulic modeling, statistical and spatial modeling | Mesoscale, moderate density population (204/km²) (World Bank, 2021) | Strengthening community resilience, improving infrastructures and services, enhancing governance and institutional capacity, enhancing regional cooperation | [73] | Available |
013 | Tajikistan | Global South | General | Temperature and rainfall | Lack of water | Temperature change results in loss of greenness and has some kind of impact on drought | Temperature (greenhouse gas emissions, historical temperature data, climate model outputs, downscaling data, land use data), rainfall (historical precipitation data, climate model outputs, downscaling data, atmospheric circulation patterns) | Tabular, vector, raster, and NetCDF | Climate modeling, downscaling data analysis, time series analysis, spatial overlay analysis | Mesoscale, low-density population (64/km²) (World Bank, 2021) | Energy efficiency, renewable energy, sustainable transport, sustainable agriculture, forest conservation and management | [74] | Available |
014 | Taiwan | Global North | Formal | Flood | Poor infrastructure, disruption of public services | Direct impact on the poor infrastructure status and other public services. | Demographic data, digital elevation models (DEMs), stream gauges, rainfall data, land use and land cover data, soil data, drainage network data | Tabular, vector, raster | Climate change scenario (RCP8.5), hydrological modeling, spatial analysis using GIS (AHP, weightage factor analysis, overlay analysis), census data analysis | Mesoscale, high-density population (652/km²) (World Bank, 2020) | Flood control infrastructures, land use management, early warning systems, flood insurance, public awareness and education | [75] | Available |
015 | Ghana | Global South | General | Drought and flood | Poor condition of settlements | Direct impact to exacerbate the poor status of settlements | Flood risk related data (surface water occurrence data, digital elevation model, climate data, land use/land cover data), drought risk related data (climate data, soil type data, vegetation index data, land use/land cover data) | Tabular, vector, raster | Normalized difference water index (NDWI) and the modified normalized difference water index (MNDWI), climate modeling of precipitation, standardized precipitation index (SPI) to estimate drought risk based on monthly precipitation, soil analysis for vulnerability against drought, DEM, LULC analysis, vegetation analysis (NDVI) | Mesoscale, moderate density population (131/km²) (World Bank, 2021) | Flood control measures, floodplain management, stormwater management, flood insurance programs, water conservation measures, drought-resistant crops and vegetation, Water reuse and recycling systems, groundwater management | [76] | Available |
016 | World | Global | General | Sea level rise | Poor settlements and infrastructures | Indirect impact by creating floods and causing damage to the settlements | Elevation data, bathymetry data, sea level rise projections, land cover data, population data, infrastructure data | Tabular, vector, raster, Web-based mapping formats | Digital elevation modeling, bathymetry modeling, statistical analysis of sea level rise projections, proximity analysis, buffering, overlay analysis, population and infrastructure data analysis | Global | Coastal protection measures, elevation of buildings and infrastructures, managed retreat, green infrastructures, flood insurance and risk communication | [77] | Available |
017 | USA | Global North | Formal | All climate risks (avalanche, coastal flood, cold wave, drought, hail, heat wave, hurricane, ice storm) + earthquake | Settlements and infrastructures, and other losses | Direct, indirect, and low impacts of the climate risks that exacerbates the existing vulnerable conditions of settlements in relation to infrastructure, health risks, and other facilities | Data about earthquake hazard, flood hazard, hurricane hazard, tornado hazard, wildfire hazard, landslide hazard, dam failure hazard, coastal storm surge hazard, riverine erosion hazard, volcanic hazard, avalanche hazard, freezing hazard, extreme temperature hazard, drought hazard, socioeconomic | Tabular, vector, raster, web-based mapping formats | Hazard data analysis, risk assessment modeling, spatial analysis (data integration, data interpolation, spatial weightage, spatial aggregation, data visualization), Index calculation | Mesoscale, low-density population (36/km²) (USCB, 2021) | Building codes and standards, hazard mitigation plans, floodplain management, ecosystem restoration, insurance | [78] | Available |
018 | Australia | Global North | Formal | Extreme temperature | Health and safety, infrastructure, and economic productivity | Indirect impact on health by influencing the vulnerabilities | Temperature data, historical climate data (time series data), quality control and homogenization data | Tabular, vector, raster | Trend analysis using time series data | Mesoscale, low-density population (3/km²) (World Bank, 2021) | Use renewable energy sources, improve energy efficiency, promote sustainable agriculture, use low-emission vehicles and public transportation, implement sustainable land use practices | [79] | Available |
019 | Cambodia | Global South | General | Temperature and precipitation | Health risks, poor settlements condition | Temperature change helps in the creation of other climate risks and thus indirectly exacerbating the existing conditions of vulnerable settlements. | Climate data from CMIP5, RCP scenarios (RCP 2.6 and RCP 8.5), time series data | Tabular, vector, raster | RCP scenarios development (RCP 2.6 and RCP 8.5), time series data analysis, CMIP5 modeling using CESM, general circulation models (GCMs) | Mesoscale, low-density population (94/km²) (World Bank, 2021) | Reducing greenhouse gas emissions, improving land use practices, enhancing urban resilience, strengthening climate information systems, improving disaster preparedness | [80] | Available |
020 | Indonesia | Global South | General | Temperature and precipitation | Poor housing, poor sanitation and hygiene, lack of water, health risks | Direct impact of rainfall changes on sanitation, hygiene, water lockage, and health risks, while indirectly exacerbating the existing vulnerable condition of houses and other services | Climate data from CMIP5, RCP scenarios (RCP 2.6 and RCP 8.5), time series data, land use data, administrative boundary data, environmental and geospatial data (soil, vegetation) | Tabular, vector, raster | RCP scenarios development (RCP 2.6 and RCP 8.5), time series data analysis, CMIP5 modeling using CESM general circulation models (GCMs), NDVI, soil analysis | Mesoscale, high-density population (145/km²) (CIA, 2021) | Reducing greenhouse gas emissions, promoting sustainable land use, improving water management, enhancing urban resilience, strengthening disaster risk management | [81] | Available |
021 | World | Global | General | Sand and dust storm | Health risks, infrastructure damage, agricultural impacts, water scarcity, hygiene and sanitation | The sand and dust storms directly cause health issues such as respiratory problems, damages settlements and other facilities/infrastructures, reduces water quality and thus helps create lack of water issues, and damages sanitation and hygiene systems | Sand and dust storm occurrence data, climate data, land cover data, human population density data | Tabular, vector, raster | Spatial overlay analysis, interpolation analysis, network analysis | Global | Improving land management practices, promoting sustainable agriculture, enhancing early warning systems, strengthening regional cooperation, implementing strategic interventions | [82] | Available |
022 | Europe | Global North | Formal | Wind storm | Overall infrastructures and settlements | Directly impacting the housing vulnerabilities | ERA-Interim reanalysis data from ECMWF for wind speeds and storm tracks, storm severity index calculated from ERA-Interim data, population density data, insured loss from wind storm data | Tabular, vector, raster | Projection based GCM and RCM models | Continent | Reducing greenhouse gas emissions, promoting renewable energy, enhancing energy efficiency, implementing sustainable land use practices, and adapting to climate change | [83] | Available |
023 | World | Global | General | Land surface temperature | All vulnerabilities of human settlements including sanitation, hygiene, health risks, housing, water scarcity, and other services | Exacerbates all other climate change risks, individually have direct and low impact on vulnerabilities of settlements | Land surface temperature data | Vector, raster | Remote sensing (data acquisition, pre-processing, and post processing of the images) | World | Increase vegetation cover, decrease greenhouse gas emissions, promote sustainable development | [84] | Available |
Climate risk maps identified within scholarly journal documents (refer to Appendix A for further details) | |||||||||||||
024 | San Diego-Tijuana, USA and Mexico | Global North and Global South | General | Rainfall, heat/temperature | Health risks, shelter vulnerability, mobility issues | Indirect impact on health due to heat. Rainfall results in floods and also have direct impact on settlement and thus exacerbating health | Socioeconomic, ecological, and climate data, vegetation cover data, and projection of heat and rainfall | Tabular, vector, raster | Bivariate mapping, binational social vulnerability index (BSVI) | Mesoscale, high-density population (469/km²) (USCB, 2021) | Construction of a binational social vulnerability index (BSVI) for climate planning of community, considers both political and ecological systems | [47] | Available |
025 | Taiwan | Global North | Formal | Landslide | Vulnerability of urban infrastructure, including buildings, transportation systems, and energy infrastructure | Direct impact on the landslide-prone area infrastructure, with potential for cascading effects on other systems, direct impact on life risk | Geological data, DEM, monitoring data, ground water data | Tabular, vector, raster | Ground investigation, electrical resistivity tomography (ERT), slope monitoring, monitoring the depth of ground-water level, slope stability analysis | Micro scale, high density population (652/km²) (World Bank, 2020) | Monitoring and modeling of the landslide-prone area, evaluation of landslide susceptibility, implementation of mitigation measures such as slope stabilization and drainage improvement | [45] | Available |
026 | Sub-Saharan Africa | Global South | General | Temperature | Poor water access, human health | Indirect impact of temperature on health and some impact on water scarcity in vulnerable settlements | CRU TS3.1 dataset | Tabular, vector, raster | Kriging geostatistical interpolation method | Mesoscale, low-density population (48/km²) (World Bank, 2021) | Policy measures to improve agricultural practices, infrastructure, and early warning systems for natural disasters; investment in alternative livelihoods and social protection measures | [59] | Available |
Web-based releases (reports and policy documents) identified and included through Google search (N = 18) | |||||||||||||
027 | World | Global | General | Extreme weather events, such as floods, droughts, and storms; sea level rise and coastal erosion; heatwaves and increased temperature; changing precipitation patterns; increased frequency and intensity of natural disaster; water scarcity and access to clean water | Unfavorable settlement location or condition; poor infrastructure, health and sanitation; poor livelihood and food security | Direct impact of extreme weather events on vulnerable housing and infrastructures (damage or loss), services and creating health risks. Heat waves and temperature changes not just impacts in creating other climate risks but also creates health issues for elderly and children which is lower impact compared to other events that directly and in large numbers results in losses | N/A | N/A | N/A | World | Address the root causes of vulnerability, strengthen disaster risk reduction, promote climate-resilient housing and infrastructure, support climate-resilient livelihoods and food security, strengthen social protection systems | [85] | N/A |
028 | New Zealand | Global North | Formal | Temperature changes, precipitation changes, extreme weather events, sea level rise | Poor infrastructure and settlements, health risks | The direct impact of extreme weather on settlements and public safety. Impact of temperature on humans, settlements and other climate risks | N/A | N/A | N/A | Mesoscale, low-density population (18/km²) (World Bank, 2020) | Increase the energy efficiency of building, increase the use of renewable energy sources, increase greenery, stormwater management, sustainable management | [86] | N/A |
029 | South Africa | Global South | General | Changing rainfall pattern, rising temperatures, droughts, floods, storm surges and coastal erosion, cyclones, heatwaves, wildfires | Poor housing conditions, health risks, food insecurity, water scarcity, infrastructure damage | Poor housing conditions are directly exacerbated by storms and floods and create health risks. | N/A | N/A | N/A | Mesoscale, low-density population (47/km²) (World Bank, 2020) | Improve governance and institutions, strengthen economic resilience, improve infrastructure and services, enhance ecosystem resilience, strengthen social and community resilience | [87] | N/A |
030 | World | Global | General | Floods, wildfires, droughts, and heatwaves | Poor housing conditions, inadequate infrastructure, limited access to basic services, socioeconomic factors | Direct impact from floods due to poor infrastructure or inadequate land use planning that exacerbates the flood risk; poor housing conditions may be more vulnerable to health risks associated with extreme heat, as the housing may lack proper ventilation or insulation | N/A | N/A | N/A | Map area (Quezon City in the Philippines)- Micro scale, high-density population (21770/km²) (World Bank, 2020) | Reducing energy consumption and transitioning to renewable energy sources, improving urban planning, green infrastructure, sustainable use of land | [88] | Available |
031 | World | Global | General | Floods, storms, and heatwaves | Limited access to basic services, poor housing conditions, limited livelihood opportunities, limited social and political capital | Poorly built or maintained settlements can increase the risk of physical damage and displacement during climate-related hazards such as floods, storms, or landslides | N/A | N/A | N/A | World | Improving infrastructure, diversifying livelihoods, promoting green technologies, strengthening community organizations | [89] | N/A |
032 | World | Global | General | Floods, droughts, cyclones, heatwaves, landslides, wildfires, sea level rise, ocean acidification | Health risks, poor housing, limited access to services, limited access to disaster risk reduction measures | The direct impact of floods on vulnerable condition of houses and resulting damage and diseases. Landslides’ direct impact on damaging poor conditioned houses | N/A | N/A | N/A | World | Retrofitting or improving building, early warning, disaster risk reduction measures, planning | [90] | N/A |
033 | World | Global | General | Floods, droughts, storms, heatwaves, and sea level rise | Poor infrastructure and settlements like informal settlements, health risks, economic vulnerabilities, social vulnerabilities of specific groups | Direct impact of floods and storms on settlements built over flood-prone lands or with drainage issues, sea level rise can result in floods that threatens low laying settlements | N/A | N/A | N/A | World | Improving infrastructure, disaster risk reduction measures, education and awareness building, urban planning | [91] | N/A |
034 | Germany | Global North | Formal | Increased frequency and intensity of extreme weather events, such as storms, flooding, and heat waves; sea level rise and coastal erosion; water scarcity and drought | Poor infrastructure, health risks, inadequate housing conditions, and limited access to resources and services and other social and economic vulnerabilities | Settlements directly impacted by climate risks such as floods and storms, which can exacerbate existing vulnerabilities such as poor housing conditions or inadequate infrastructure; heatwaves also result in damage to impacts including health impacts | N/A | N/A | N/A | Mesoscale, high-density population (237/km²) (World Bank, 2021) | Mitigation measures against climate risks include reducing energy demand in buildings, decarbonizing transportation, improving land use planning, promoting sustainable agriculture and forestry, conserving water, improving waste management, and enhancing critical infrastructure resilience | [92] | N/A |
035 | World | Global | General | Extreme weather events (floods, droughts, storms, and heatwaves); sea level rise and coastal erosion; related risks (water scarcity and water pollution) | Poor housing conditions, limited access to basic services, lack of infrastructure and inadequate building codes, dependence on climate-sensitive livelihoods, limited financial resources and access to insurance | Extreme events such as floods and storms directly exacerbate the poor housing conditions in areas such as informal settlements; drought can exacerbate the health impacts of climate-related disasters | N/A | N/A | N/A | World | Climate risk insurance for the mostly affect especially in global south, promoting water conservation and reuse, improving housing conditions | [93] | N/A |
036 | World | Global South | Informal | Extreme rainfall and floods, extreme heat, fires, water scarcity | Lack of adequate income, lack of infrastructure and basic services, lack of voice in governance, physical location that is often environmentally fragile, high levels of poverty, political and institutional marginalization, exclusion from risk-reducing infrastructure and support to cope with shocks, social drivers of vulnerability like low-income and gender discrimination, lack of registered address for households living in informal settlements, which can result in denial of access to infrastructure and services crucial for resilience | Floods can directly impact the poor housing conditions in informal settlements, extreme heat can worsen the already poor living conditions in informal settlements, water scarcity can further exacerbate poverty and increase health risks, fires can spread rapidly in informal settlements, climate change-related disasters and stresses can deepen poverty and worsen social exclusion | N/A | N/A | N/A | World | Upgrading informal settlements, mainstreaming risk management into urban development, elevating the role of local governments, community and government partnerships, Assessing and anticipating future climate-related risk | [94] | N/A |
037 | Indonesia | Global South | General | Flood, sea level rise, drought, landslide, extreme temperature | Poor housing conditions, health risks, limited access to basic services, limited access to information and early warning systems, high levels of poverty | Flooding directly impact settlements by damaging homes and infrastructure, disrupting transportation, and increasing the risk of waterborne diseases; sea level rise can lead to saltwater intrusion and erosion of coastal areas; landslides can damage homes and infrastructure and cause injuries; drought can impact agriculture, exacerbate food insecurity, and increase poverty and social exclusion; extreme temperatures and heat waves can increase the risk of heat-related illnesses and exacerbate existing vulnerabilities like limited access to healthcare and high levels of poverty | N/A | N/A | Flood projection model | Mesoscale, high-density population (145/km²) (CIA, 2021) | Improving infrastructure, promoting sustainable agriculture, strengthening early warning systems, enhancing community resilience, improving access to basic services, promoting disaster risk reduction | [95] | Available |
038 | East Africa | Regional (Global South) | General | Flood, sea level rise, drought | Poor infrastructure and inadequate provision of basic services | Settlements with poor housing conditions, inadequate infrastructure, and limited access to basic services may be more vulnerable to the direct impacts of climate hazards, such as flooding | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A | Water resources and water-dependent services, health and upgrading services | [96] | N/A |
039 | ASEAN countries | Global South and Global North | General | Storms, floods, droughts, and heatwaves, sea level rise | Poor housing conditions, health risks, limited access to safe drinking water and sanitation, economic and social vulnerability | Direct and significant impact on the vulnerabilities of settlements, particularly those that are located in areas that are more susceptible to climate-related hazards such as floods, storms, and sea level rise | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A | Reducing greenhouse gas emissions, promoting renewable energy, improving energy efficiency, enhancing natural carbon sinks, developing climate-resilient infrastructure, promoting sustainable land use | [97] | N/A |
040 | North Carolina, USA | Global North | Formal | Severe storms and flooding, high temperatures and heat waves, drought and water scarcity, sea level rise and storm surge flooding, erosion and shoreline changes, changes in precipitation patterns, increased frequency and intensity of hurricanes and tropical storms, wildfires and smoke impacts | Lack of access to air conditioning and cooling systems in housing, low-lying areas, and coastal communities, aging and inadequate infrastructure, limited access to reliable and safe drinking water, limited access to health and other services | Flooding and storm surge can cause direct damage to homes, extreme heat events can be particularly dangerous for vulnerable populations living in settlements with limited access to air conditioning, drought and water scarcity can exacerbate existing water access challenges in settlements with limited access, climate-related health impacts, such as respiratory illnesses from wildfire smoke or heat-related illnesses | N/A | N/A | N/A | Mesoscale, low-density population (36/km²) (USCB, 2021) | Investing in infrastructure improvements, heat emergency plans, reducing the impacts of drought, enhancing public health surveillance systems, reducing greenhouse gas emissions | [98] | N/A |
041 | Nepal | Global South | General | Flooding and landslides, drought, heatwave | Poor infrastructure and housing conditions, lack of access to safe drinking water and proper sanitation, vulnerable populations, such as women, children, the elderly, and people with disabilities | Impacts of floods and landslides is higher in vulnerable settlements, drought creates health issues and indirectly impacting the vulnerable situation of people | N/A | N/A | N/A | Mesoscale, moderate density population (204/km²) (World Bank, 2021) | Disaster reduction plans, water management, green infrastructure | [99] | N/A |
042 | Fiji | Global South | General | Tropical cyclones, storm surges, floods, droughts, landslides, sea level rise | Poor housing conditions and inadequate infrastructure, limited access to safe water and sanitation, infrastructure, and services | Landslides, storms, and other risks exacerbate the available lack of service status of the settlements | N/A | N/A | N/A | Mesoscale, low-density population (49.9/km²) (World Bank, 2020) | Upgrading informal settlements, building socioeconomic resilience, planning | [100] | N/A |
043 | Southern Africa | Global South | General | Sea level rise, temperature change, wildfire, floods | Poor housing conditions and inadequate infrastructure, limited access to safe water and sanitation, lack of services | Direct impact of floods on lives and settlements. Temperature’s significant impact on other climate risks, limited access to safe water and sanitation can increase the risk of disease outbreaks during floods and droughts | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A | Coastal defense and management, water management, climate resilient housing, sustainable development | [101] | N/A |
044 | Ottawa, Canada | Global North | Formal | heavy rainfall, floods, heatwaves, and storms, Rising sea levels and coastal erosion, wildfire | Poor quality housing and inadequate infrastructure, Limited access to green spaces, Limited access to affordable housing, Social and economic inequality | flooding, landslides, and other hazards, and worsen the impacts on poor housing and their residents | N/A | N/A | N/A | Mesoscale, high-density population (334/km²) (Statistics Canada, 2021) | Promoting sustainable land use practice, greenery, coastal management, sanitation improvement, promoting resilience | [102] | N/A |
Appendix C. Maps Retrieved from the Sources. (Refer to Appendix A and Appendix B for Further Details)
Map Code/Risk | Map | Map Code/Risk | Map |
001/Flood risk | 002/Heat risk | ||
003/Cyclone, drought, and flood | 004/sea level rise | ||
005/Cyclones (hurricanes and typhoons) | 006/Extreme rainfall | ||
007/Water stress | 008/Heat stress | ||
009/Cyclone | 010/Riverine flooding, bushfire, surface water flooding, coastal inundation, extreme wind | ||
011/Storms (hurricanes, typhoons, cyclones), floods, heatwaves, precipitation, landslides, strong wind, wildfire | 012/Avalanches, floods, heavy rainfall, and landslides | ||
013/Temperature and rainfall | 014/Flood | ||
015/Drought and flood | 016/Sea level rise | ||
017/All climate risks (avalanche, coastal flood, cold wave, drought, hail, heat wave, hurricane, ice storm) + earthquake | 018/Extreme temperature | ||
019/Temperature and precipitation | 020/Temperature and precipitation | ||
021/Sand and dust storm | 022/Wind storm | ||
023/Land surface temperature | 024/Rainfall, heat/temperature | ||
025/Landslide | 026/Temperature | ||
030/Floods, wildfires, droughts, and heatwaves | 037/Flood, sea level rise, drought, landslide, extreme temperature |
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Geographical Area | Climate Risks | Map Link |
---|---|---|
World | Storms (hurricanes, typhoons, cyclones), floods, heatwaves, precipitation, landslides, strong wind, and wildfire | https://www.germanwatch.org/en/19777 (accessed on 19 January 2024) |
Sand and dust storm | https://www.preventionweb.net/publication/global-assessment-sand-and-dust-storms (accessed on 19 January 2024) | |
Sea level rise | https://ss2.climatecentral.org/#12/40.7165/-16674.0088?show=satellite&projections=0-K14_RCP85-SLR&level=5&unit=feet&pois=hide (accessed on 19 January 2024) | |
Land surface temperature | https://earthobservatory.nasa.gov/global-maps/MOD_LSTD_M (accessed on 19 January 2024) | |
Europe | London: flood and heat risk | https://data.london.gov.uk/dataset/climate-risk-mapping (accessed on 19 January 2024) |
Europe: wind storm | https://www.eea.europa.eu/data-and-maps/indicators/storms-2/assessment (accessed on 19 January 2024) | |
USA | Avalanche, coastal flood, cold wave, drought, hail, heat wave, hurricane, ice storm + earthquake | https://www.americancommunities.org/mapping-climate-risks-by-county-and-community/ (accessed on 19 January 2024) |
Heat stress | ||
Water stress | ||
Extreme rainfall | ||
Cyclones: hurricanes, typhoons | ||
Sea level rise | ||
Australia | Extreme temperature | https://www.climatechangeinaustralia.gov.au/en/changing-climate/climate-extremes/extreme-temperature/ (accessed on 19 January 2024) |
Sydney: Riverine flooding, bushfire, surface water flooding, coastal Inundation, extreme wind | https://www.climatecouncil.org.au/resources/climate-risk-map/ (accessed on 19 January 2024) | |
Asia | India: Cyclone, drought, flood | https://www.ceew.in/publications/mapping-climate-change-vulnerability-index-of-india-a-district-level-assessment (accessed on 19 January 2024) |
Bangladesh: Cyclone | http://dx.doi.org/10.22617/TCS210518 (accessed on 19 January 2024) | |
Nepal: Avalanches, floods, heavy rainfall, landslides | https://doi.org/10.1029/2021EO159039 (accessed on 19 January 2024) | |
Tajikistan: Temperature, rainfall | https://www.adb.org/publications/climate-risk-country-profile-tajikistan (accessed on 19 January 2024) | |
Taiwan: Flood | https://doi.org/10.3390/w14020207 (accessed on 19 January 2024) | |
Cambodia: Temperature, precipitation | https://www.adb.org/publications/climate-risk-country-profile-cambodia (accessed on 19 January 2024) | |
Indonesia: Temperature, precipitation | https://www.adb.org/publications/climate-risk-country-profile-indonesia (accessed on 19 January 2024) | |
Africa | Ghana: Drought and flood | https://www.preventionweb.net/knowledge-base/type-content/documents-publications (accessed on 19 January 2024) |
Criteria | Inclusion | Exclusion |
---|---|---|
Publication timeline | Any | Not excluded any |
Document type | Peer-reviewed papers (research and review articles), web-based maps, government and non-government reports, policy documents | Unreliable resource (Papers-not peer-reviewed, web-based maps-not government or credible organization), report and policy documents-not relevant, book, book chapters, conference proceeding, repeated |
Language | English | Other than English |
Nature of study | Papers, reports, policy documents and web-based releases focused on climate risk, human settlements, urban vulnerability, and climate vulnerabilities of formal or informal settlements | Not focused on climate risk, human settlements, urban vulnerability, and climate vulnerabilities of formal or informal settlements |
Study area | Urban studies, climate change and climate risk, human settlements, architecture, and other relevant areas | Not related to climate risk and human settlements |
Location | Any | Not excluded any |
Database | Attempts | Search String | Documents Retrieved | Relevance to Study Aim | Objective 1, Climate Risk Factors | Objective 2, Settlement Vulnerabilities | Objective 3, Climate Risk Level of Impact on Settlement Vulnerabilities |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Scopus | 1 | TITLE-ABS-KEY ((“climate change factor” OR “climate change map” OR “climate risk map”) AND (“settlement” OR “informal settlement”) AND “vulnerability”) | 1 | Medium | Yes | Yes | Yes |
2 | TITLE-ABS-KEY ((“climate change factor” OR “climate change map” OR “climate risk map” OR “climate change impact”) AND (“settlement” OR “informal settlement”) AND (“vulnerability” OR “vulnerable”)) | 62 | Medium | Yes | Yes | Yes | |
3 | TITLE-ABS-KEY ((“climate risk” OR “climate change map” OR “climate risk map” OR “climate risk impact”) AND (“settlement” OR “informal settlement”) AND (“vulnerability” OR “vulnerable”)) | 40 | High | Yes | Yes | Yes | |
4 | TITLE-ABS-KEY ((“climate risk” OR “climate change map” OR “climate risk map” OR “climate risk impact” OR “climate change impact”) AND (“settlement” OR “informal settlement”) AND (“vulnerability” OR “vulnerable”)) | 99 | High | Yes | Yes | Yes | |
ScienceDirect | 1 | ((“climate change factor” OR “climate change map” OR “climate risk map”) AND (“settlement” OR “informal settlement”) AND “vulnerability”) | 0 | Low/none | No | No | No |
2 | ((“climate change factor” OR “climate change map” OR “climate risk map” OR “climate change impact”) AND (“settlement” OR “informal settlement”) AND (“vulnerability” OR “vulnerable”)) | 7 | High | Yes | Yes | Yes | |
3 | ((“climate risk” OR “climate change map” OR “climate risk map” OR “climate risk impact”) AND (“settlement” OR “informal settlement”) AND (“vulnerability” OR “vulnerable”)) | 11 | High | Yes | Yes | Yes | |
4 | ((“climate risk” OR “climate change map” OR “climate risk map” OR “climate risk impact” OR “climate change impact”) AND (“settlement” OR “informal settlement”) AND (“vulnerability” OR “vulnerable”)) | 17 | High | Yes | Yes | Yes | |
Google search engine | 1 | ((“climate risk” OR “climate change map” OR “climate risk map” OR “climate risk impact” OR “climate change impact”) AND (“settlement” OR “informal settlement”) AND (“vulnerability” OR “vulnerable”)) | 14 | Low | Yes | Yes | Yes |
2 | (“climate risk” OR “climate change map” OR “climate risk map” OR “climate risk impact” OR “climate change impact”) AND (“settlement” OR “informal settlement”) AND (“vulnerability” OR “vulnerable”) | 153 | Medium | Yes | Yes | Yes | |
3 | “climate risk”|“climate risk impact”|“climate risk map”|“climate risk impact” & “settlement”|“informal settlement” & “vulnerability”|“vulnerable” | 158 | High | Yes | Yes | Yes |
Sources | Climate Risk Factors | Vulnerabilities of Settlements | |||||||||||
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Floods | Temperature Change | Rainfall | Storms | Sea Level Rise | Landslides | Drought | Inadequate Sanitation | Inadequate Hygiene | Limited Access to Water | Poor Housing Conditions | Health Risks | Lack of other Basic Services | |
[43] | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ||||||||
[44] | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | |||||
[45] | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | |||||||
[46] | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ||||||||||
[47] | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | |||||
[48] | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ||||||
[49] | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | |||
[50] | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | |||||||
[51] | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | |||||
[52] | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ||||||
[53] | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ||||||||||
[41] | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | |||||||||
[54] | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | |||||||
[38] | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | |||
[55] | ✔ | ✔ | |||||||||||
[56] | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ||||||||||
[57] | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | |||
[58] | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ |
[59] | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ||||
[60] | ✔ | ✔ | |||||||||||
[61] | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ||||
[62] | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ||||||
[63] | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ||||||||||
[64] | ✔ | ✔ | |||||||||||
[65] | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | |||
[66] | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | |||||
[67] | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | |||||||||
[9] | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ||
[33] | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ||||||||||
[33] | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ||||||||||
[68] | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ||||||||
[69] | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ||||||||
[69] | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | |||||||||
[69] | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ||||||||||
[69] | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ||||||||||
[69] | ✔ | ✔ | |||||||||||
[70] | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | |||||||
[71] | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | |||
[72] | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ||||
[73] | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | |||||
[74] | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ||||||||||
[75] | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ||||||
[76] | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ||||||||||
[77] | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ||||||
[78] | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ||
[79] | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ||||||
[80] | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | |||||||||
[81] | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ||||||
[82] | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ||||||
[83] | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ||||||
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[88] | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ||||
[89] | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ||||||||
[90] | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | |||
[91] | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ||
[92] | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | |||||
[93] | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | |
[94] | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | |||
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[96] | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ||||
[97] | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | |||
[98] | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | |
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[101] | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ||||
[102] | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ |
Climate Risk Factors Synthesis | Vulnerabilities of Settlements Synthesis | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Factors | Specific factors/terms described in the sources | Number of times a factor is investigated in sources | Countries/regions most vulnerable to the climate risk factor | Most vulnerable countries to climate risks | Vulnerabilities | Specific vulnerabilities/terms described in the sources | Number of times a vulnerability is investigated in sources |
Floods | Flood, flood risks, riverine flooding, surface water flooding, coastal floods, coastal inundation | 44 | South Asia and Sub-Saharan Africa [103] | Mozambique, Zimbabwe, Bahamas, Japan, Malawi, Afghanistan, India, South Sudan, Niger, Bolivia, Sudan, Nepal, Bangladesh, Indonesia, Pakistan, Comoros, Philippines, Iran, Australia, Paraguay [72] | Inadequate sanitation | Inadequate sanitation, lack of proper sanitation, unsafe waste disposal, sanitation | 41 |
Temperature change | heat risk, heat stress, heat wave, temperature, extreme temperature, heat extreme, land surface temperature, cold wave, wildfire, bushfire, urban heat islands | 41 | Small island developing states (SIDS), Arctic and high-mountain regions, Africa, Asia, particularly Southeast Asia and South Asia, Latin America [104] | Inadequate hygiene | Inadequate hygiene, individual hygiene, hygiene | 39 | |
Rainfall | Extreme rainfall, heavy rainfall, precipitation | 23 | South and Southeast Asia, Central and East Africa, Caribbean islands, South America [105] | Limited access to water | Limited access to water, water shortage, drought, lack of water, water unavailability | 38 | |
Storms | Typhoons, hurricanes, cyclones, tropical cyclones, sand and dust storms, windstorm, ice storm, avalanches, strong wind, extreme wind, hail, storm surges | 31 | Coastal areas of Europe, North America, Caribbean islands, Southeast Asia, India, Bangladesh, East Africa, Middle East and North Africa for sand and dust storms [106] | Poor housing conditions | Poor housing conditions, poor infrastructure of settlements, inadequate and substandard housing structures, increasing health, safety, financial, and shelter concerns | 64 | |
Sea level rise | Sea level rise | 30 | SIDS, Coasts of Bangladesh, India, Africa, U.S, Southeast Asia, Caribbean islands [107] | Health risks | Health risks, diseases, health issues, injuries, losses | 50 | |
Landslides | Landslides, slope instability, mudslides | 14 | Nepal, Himalayan region, the Philippines, Central America, East Africa [72] | Lack of other basic services | Lack of other basic services, limited access to healthcare, education, transportation, mobility, economic services, other infrastructure | 49 | |
Drought | Drought, water stress | 28 | Sahel region, horn, and south of Africa, central and south America, south and central Asia, Australia [108] |
Vulnerabilities | Inadequate Sanitation | Inadequate Hygiene | Limited Access to Water | Poor Housing Conditions | Health Risks | Lack of Other Basic Services | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Factors | |||||||
Floods | Direct impact | Direct impact | Direct impact | Direct impact | Direct impact | Direct impact | |
Temperature change | Indirect impact | Indirect impact | Low impact | Low impact | Indirect impact | Low impact | |
Rainfall | Direct impact | Direct impact | Direct impact | Indirect impact | Direct impact | Indirect impact | |
Storms | Direct impact | Direct impact | Direct impact | Direct impact | Direct impact | Direct impact | |
Sea level rise | Direct impact | Direct impact | Low impact | Indirect impact | Indirect impact | Low impact | |
Landslides | Indirect impact | Indirect impact | Indirect impact | Direct impact | Indirect impact | Indirect impact | |
Drought | Low impact | Indirect impact | Direct impact | Low impact | Indirect impact | Indirect impact |
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© 2024 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
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Hussainzad, E.A.; Gou, Z. Climate Risk and Vulnerability Assessment in Informal Settlements of the Global South: A Critical Review. Land 2024, 13, 1357. https://doi.org/10.3390/land13091357
Hussainzad EA, Gou Z. Climate Risk and Vulnerability Assessment in Informal Settlements of the Global South: A Critical Review. Land. 2024; 13(9):1357. https://doi.org/10.3390/land13091357
Chicago/Turabian StyleHussainzad, Emal Ahmad, and Zhonghua Gou. 2024. "Climate Risk and Vulnerability Assessment in Informal Settlements of the Global South: A Critical Review" Land 13, no. 9: 1357. https://doi.org/10.3390/land13091357
APA StyleHussainzad, E. A., & Gou, Z. (2024). Climate Risk and Vulnerability Assessment in Informal Settlements of the Global South: A Critical Review. Land, 13(9), 1357. https://doi.org/10.3390/land13091357