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Poverty and climate change in urban Bangladesh: an analytical framework

Research output: Working paper

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Poverty and climate change in urban Bangladesh: an analytical framework. / Roy, Manoj; Guy, Simon; Hulme, David et al.
Brooks World Poverty Institute, University of Manchester, 2011. (BWPI Working Paper).

Research output: Working paper

Harvard

Roy, M, Guy, S, Hulme, D & Jahan, F 2011 'Poverty and climate change in urban Bangladesh: an analytical framework' BWPI Working Paper, Brooks World Poverty Institute, University of Manchester. <http://www.seed.manchester.ac.uk/medialibrary/bwpi/publications/working_papers/bwpi-wp-14811.pdf>

APA

Roy, M., Guy, S., Hulme, D., & Jahan, F. (2011). Poverty and climate change in urban Bangladesh: an analytical framework. (BWPI Working Paper). Brooks World Poverty Institute, University of Manchester. http://www.seed.manchester.ac.uk/medialibrary/bwpi/publications/working_papers/bwpi-wp-14811.pdf

Vancouver

Roy M, Guy S, Hulme D, Jahan F. Poverty and climate change in urban Bangladesh: an analytical framework. Brooks World Poverty Institute, University of Manchester. 2011. (BWPI Working Paper).

Author

Roy, Manoj ; Guy, Simon ; Hulme, David et al. / Poverty and climate change in urban Bangladesh : an analytical framework. Brooks World Poverty Institute, University of Manchester, 2011. (BWPI Working Paper).

Bibtex

@techreport{84a63c0946c1439fbe713165bc4410ea,
title = "Poverty and climate change in urban Bangladesh: an analytical framework",
abstract = "Around 40 percent of Bangladesh{\textquoteright}s population are poor people for whom a variable and unpredictable climate can critically restrict livelihood options. This is true in rural and urban areas alike, but this study focuses on the latter. Urban poverty continues to be neglected in research, policy and action for climate change adaptation in the country. The study builds on three propositions: (i) poor urban communities are places where physical and socioeconomic vulnerability coincide; (ii) urban areas are exposed to three forms of climate change impact: rapid-onset events, gradual-onset processes, and cascade effects; and (iii) poor urban people are already adapting to emergent climate change impacts by actively developing various practices. The analytical framework places a strong emphasis on poor people{\textquoteright}s adaptation practices in order to understand their agency, cultural resources and economic strategies and the structural factors that both support and constrain their agency. The practices are examined in terms of three key elements: the socio-economic resources of poor urban households and communities; institutions and political economy; and external actors and resources. Six low-income settlements have been chosen for case studies from three cities – Dhaka, Chittagong and Khulna. Data collection involves: mini-surveys; qualitative methods; dialogues with local academics, policymakers and civil society groups; and action research. Key analytical findings include the identification and analysis of existing practices under five broad themes (e.g. livelihoods, built environment, networks, institutions, and external supports).",
author = "Manoj Roy and Simon Guy and David Hulme and Ferdous Jahan",
year = "2011",
language = "English",
volume = "148",
series = "BWPI Working Paper",
publisher = "Brooks World Poverty Institute, University of Manchester",
type = "WorkingPaper",
institution = "Brooks World Poverty Institute, University of Manchester",

}

RIS

TY - UNPB

T1 - Poverty and climate change in urban Bangladesh

T2 - an analytical framework

AU - Roy, Manoj

AU - Guy, Simon

AU - Hulme, David

AU - Jahan, Ferdous

PY - 2011

Y1 - 2011

N2 - Around 40 percent of Bangladesh’s population are poor people for whom a variable and unpredictable climate can critically restrict livelihood options. This is true in rural and urban areas alike, but this study focuses on the latter. Urban poverty continues to be neglected in research, policy and action for climate change adaptation in the country. The study builds on three propositions: (i) poor urban communities are places where physical and socioeconomic vulnerability coincide; (ii) urban areas are exposed to three forms of climate change impact: rapid-onset events, gradual-onset processes, and cascade effects; and (iii) poor urban people are already adapting to emergent climate change impacts by actively developing various practices. The analytical framework places a strong emphasis on poor people’s adaptation practices in order to understand their agency, cultural resources and economic strategies and the structural factors that both support and constrain their agency. The practices are examined in terms of three key elements: the socio-economic resources of poor urban households and communities; institutions and political economy; and external actors and resources. Six low-income settlements have been chosen for case studies from three cities – Dhaka, Chittagong and Khulna. Data collection involves: mini-surveys; qualitative methods; dialogues with local academics, policymakers and civil society groups; and action research. Key analytical findings include the identification and analysis of existing practices under five broad themes (e.g. livelihoods, built environment, networks, institutions, and external supports).

AB - Around 40 percent of Bangladesh’s population are poor people for whom a variable and unpredictable climate can critically restrict livelihood options. This is true in rural and urban areas alike, but this study focuses on the latter. Urban poverty continues to be neglected in research, policy and action for climate change adaptation in the country. The study builds on three propositions: (i) poor urban communities are places where physical and socioeconomic vulnerability coincide; (ii) urban areas are exposed to three forms of climate change impact: rapid-onset events, gradual-onset processes, and cascade effects; and (iii) poor urban people are already adapting to emergent climate change impacts by actively developing various practices. The analytical framework places a strong emphasis on poor people’s adaptation practices in order to understand their agency, cultural resources and economic strategies and the structural factors that both support and constrain their agency. The practices are examined in terms of three key elements: the socio-economic resources of poor urban households and communities; institutions and political economy; and external actors and resources. Six low-income settlements have been chosen for case studies from three cities – Dhaka, Chittagong and Khulna. Data collection involves: mini-surveys; qualitative methods; dialogues with local academics, policymakers and civil society groups; and action research. Key analytical findings include the identification and analysis of existing practices under five broad themes (e.g. livelihoods, built environment, networks, institutions, and external supports).

M3 - Working paper

VL - 148

T3 - BWPI Working Paper

BT - Poverty and climate change in urban Bangladesh

PB - Brooks World Poverty Institute, University of Manchester

ER -