Home > Research > Publications & Outputs > Fluid engagements
View graph of relations

Fluid engagements: responding to the co-evolution of poverty and climate change in Dhaka, Bangladesh

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Published

Standard

Fluid engagements: responding to the co-evolution of poverty and climate change in Dhaka, Bangladesh. / Jabeen, Huraera; Guy, Simon.
In: Habitat International, Vol. 47, 06.2015, p. 307-314.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

APA

Vancouver

Jabeen H, Guy S. Fluid engagements: responding to the co-evolution of poverty and climate change in Dhaka, Bangladesh. Habitat International. 2015 Jun;47:307-314. Epub 2015 Mar 17. doi: 10.1016/j.habitatint.2015.02.005

Author

Jabeen, Huraera ; Guy, Simon. / Fluid engagements : responding to the co-evolution of poverty and climate change in Dhaka, Bangladesh. In: Habitat International. 2015 ; Vol. 47. pp. 307-314.

Bibtex

@article{ac281eaab8704cf7bb3063c2d7a04cff,
title = "Fluid engagements: responding to the co-evolution of poverty and climate change in Dhaka, Bangladesh",
abstract = "Most individuals living in low-income households in cities like Dhaka, Bangladesh, reside in informal, high-density settlements that experience exacerbated vulnerabilities from climate change. When determining development approaches that take into account future needs for adaptation, community residents and the professionals and policymakers who support these communities must consider the existing challenges associated with living in poverty, the rapidly increasing rate of urbanization, and future climate risks. The key objectives of this paper are to expand the understanding of the co-evolution of these {"}wicked problems{"} and the need for developing alternative strategies for adaptation.The paper explores the organic creativity of residents living in informal settlements as they draw upon locally available resources to create situation specific, pragmatic solutions to locally defined challenges. We term this practice {"}fluid engagement,{"} a design approach that aspires to be flexible, situated, pragmatic and participative, and demonstrates a willingness to be open to heterogeneous combinations of purpose and programs. Critically, {"}fluidity{"} suggests a participative approach to design that takes into account the {"}voices{"} beyond the policy and professional nexus to the participation of the community.This paper aims to connect emerging literature concerning the urban practices of low-income households in cities of the South with a detailed case-study analysis of the spatial practices at the micro-level in an informal settlement in Dhaka. The paper contributes to a new agenda of architectural and urban-development research that engages with issues of poverty and climate change as a process of co-evolution. (C) 2015 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.",
keywords = "Built environment, Climate change, Fluidity, Informality, Urban poverty, CHANGE ADAPTATION, URBAN-POOR, VULNERABILITY, CITIES, STRATEGIES, RESILIENCE, RESPONSES, EXTREMES, KHULNA",
author = "Huraera Jabeen and Simon Guy",
year = "2015",
month = jun,
doi = "10.1016/j.habitatint.2015.02.005",
language = "English",
volume = "47",
pages = "307--314",
journal = "Habitat International",
issn = "0197-3975",
publisher = "Elsevier Limited",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Fluid engagements

T2 - responding to the co-evolution of poverty and climate change in Dhaka, Bangladesh

AU - Jabeen, Huraera

AU - Guy, Simon

PY - 2015/6

Y1 - 2015/6

N2 - Most individuals living in low-income households in cities like Dhaka, Bangladesh, reside in informal, high-density settlements that experience exacerbated vulnerabilities from climate change. When determining development approaches that take into account future needs for adaptation, community residents and the professionals and policymakers who support these communities must consider the existing challenges associated with living in poverty, the rapidly increasing rate of urbanization, and future climate risks. The key objectives of this paper are to expand the understanding of the co-evolution of these "wicked problems" and the need for developing alternative strategies for adaptation.The paper explores the organic creativity of residents living in informal settlements as they draw upon locally available resources to create situation specific, pragmatic solutions to locally defined challenges. We term this practice "fluid engagement," a design approach that aspires to be flexible, situated, pragmatic and participative, and demonstrates a willingness to be open to heterogeneous combinations of purpose and programs. Critically, "fluidity" suggests a participative approach to design that takes into account the "voices" beyond the policy and professional nexus to the participation of the community.This paper aims to connect emerging literature concerning the urban practices of low-income households in cities of the South with a detailed case-study analysis of the spatial practices at the micro-level in an informal settlement in Dhaka. The paper contributes to a new agenda of architectural and urban-development research that engages with issues of poverty and climate change as a process of co-evolution. (C) 2015 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

AB - Most individuals living in low-income households in cities like Dhaka, Bangladesh, reside in informal, high-density settlements that experience exacerbated vulnerabilities from climate change. When determining development approaches that take into account future needs for adaptation, community residents and the professionals and policymakers who support these communities must consider the existing challenges associated with living in poverty, the rapidly increasing rate of urbanization, and future climate risks. The key objectives of this paper are to expand the understanding of the co-evolution of these "wicked problems" and the need for developing alternative strategies for adaptation.The paper explores the organic creativity of residents living in informal settlements as they draw upon locally available resources to create situation specific, pragmatic solutions to locally defined challenges. We term this practice "fluid engagement," a design approach that aspires to be flexible, situated, pragmatic and participative, and demonstrates a willingness to be open to heterogeneous combinations of purpose and programs. Critically, "fluidity" suggests a participative approach to design that takes into account the "voices" beyond the policy and professional nexus to the participation of the community.This paper aims to connect emerging literature concerning the urban practices of low-income households in cities of the South with a detailed case-study analysis of the spatial practices at the micro-level in an informal settlement in Dhaka. The paper contributes to a new agenda of architectural and urban-development research that engages with issues of poverty and climate change as a process of co-evolution. (C) 2015 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

KW - Built environment

KW - Climate change

KW - Fluidity

KW - Informality

KW - Urban poverty

KW - CHANGE ADAPTATION

KW - URBAN-POOR

KW - VULNERABILITY

KW - CITIES

KW - STRATEGIES

KW - RESILIENCE

KW - RESPONSES

KW - EXTREMES

KW - KHULNA

U2 - 10.1016/j.habitatint.2015.02.005

DO - 10.1016/j.habitatint.2015.02.005

M3 - Journal article

VL - 47

SP - 307

EP - 314

JO - Habitat International

JF - Habitat International

SN - 0197-3975

ER -