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To live with floods or not: Intersectionality of drivers of urban households’ adaptation and relocation intentions

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To live with floods or not: Intersectionality of drivers of urban households’ adaptation and relocation intentions. / Twerefou, Daniel; Abeney, Jacob; Larbi, Reuben et al.
In: Journal of Flood Risk Management, Vol. 17, No. 4, e13015, 31.12.2024.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

APA

Twerefou, D., Abeney, J., Larbi, R., & Dovie, D. B. (2024). To live with floods or not: Intersectionality of drivers of urban households’ adaptation and relocation intentions. Journal of Flood Risk Management, 17(4), Article e13015. https://doi.org/10.1111/jfr3.13015

Vancouver

Twerefou D, Abeney J, Larbi R, Dovie DB. To live with floods or not: Intersectionality of drivers of urban households’ adaptation and relocation intentions. Journal of Flood Risk Management. 2024 Dec 31;17(4):e13015. Epub 2024 Jun 19. doi: 10.1111/jfr3.13015

Author

Twerefou, Daniel ; Abeney, Jacob ; Larbi, Reuben et al. / To live with floods or not : Intersectionality of drivers of urban households’ adaptation and relocation intentions. In: Journal of Flood Risk Management. 2024 ; Vol. 17, No. 4.

Bibtex

@article{fe8bf521d3064b84a8540554e391eaa1,
title = "To live with floods or not: Intersectionality of drivers of urban households{\textquoteright} adaptation and relocation intentions",
abstract = "The intent of households to relocate amidst floods in Ghana's Greater Accra Metropolitan Area, using combined socio-demographic and physical factors is analyzed within 1,206 households. The National Master Sampling Frame of Ghana's Population and Housing Census is utilized for the sampling. The Probit estimation technique is employed to understand the intersectionality of social, economic, demographic, and physical considerations influencing households' decision-making regarding relocation amidst flood risks. The findings show households' reluctance to relocate contrary to relocation considered mostly as preferred adaptation. The likelihood of relocating exhibited a non-linear pattern, decreasing only when a population was younger until age 55 before reversing. Indigenous households preferred not to relocate. In communities where place attachment and revenue sources significantly impacted relocation decisions, households with secondary education, past flood experiences, and non-indigenous status influenced higher perception of flood risk. Therefore, relocation as an effective global adaptation strategy to floods is not widespread. Thus, empowering households to accept a certain level of flood risk potentially avoids maladaptation and involves a combination of hard infrastructure measures and regulatory approaches in places of residence that do not compromise livelihoods. However, if relocation becomes necessary, a right-based approach must be favored over an absolute risk-based approach.",
author = "Daniel Twerefou and Jacob Abeney and Reuben Larbi and Dovie, {Delali Benjamin}",
year = "2024",
month = dec,
day = "31",
doi = "10.1111/jfr3.13015",
language = "English",
volume = "17",
journal = "Journal of Flood Risk Management",
issn = "1753-318X",
publisher = "Wiley/Blackwell (10.1111)",
number = "4",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - To live with floods or not

T2 - Intersectionality of drivers of urban households’ adaptation and relocation intentions

AU - Twerefou, Daniel

AU - Abeney, Jacob

AU - Larbi, Reuben

AU - Dovie, Delali Benjamin

PY - 2024/12/31

Y1 - 2024/12/31

N2 - The intent of households to relocate amidst floods in Ghana's Greater Accra Metropolitan Area, using combined socio-demographic and physical factors is analyzed within 1,206 households. The National Master Sampling Frame of Ghana's Population and Housing Census is utilized for the sampling. The Probit estimation technique is employed to understand the intersectionality of social, economic, demographic, and physical considerations influencing households' decision-making regarding relocation amidst flood risks. The findings show households' reluctance to relocate contrary to relocation considered mostly as preferred adaptation. The likelihood of relocating exhibited a non-linear pattern, decreasing only when a population was younger until age 55 before reversing. Indigenous households preferred not to relocate. In communities where place attachment and revenue sources significantly impacted relocation decisions, households with secondary education, past flood experiences, and non-indigenous status influenced higher perception of flood risk. Therefore, relocation as an effective global adaptation strategy to floods is not widespread. Thus, empowering households to accept a certain level of flood risk potentially avoids maladaptation and involves a combination of hard infrastructure measures and regulatory approaches in places of residence that do not compromise livelihoods. However, if relocation becomes necessary, a right-based approach must be favored over an absolute risk-based approach.

AB - The intent of households to relocate amidst floods in Ghana's Greater Accra Metropolitan Area, using combined socio-demographic and physical factors is analyzed within 1,206 households. The National Master Sampling Frame of Ghana's Population and Housing Census is utilized for the sampling. The Probit estimation technique is employed to understand the intersectionality of social, economic, demographic, and physical considerations influencing households' decision-making regarding relocation amidst flood risks. The findings show households' reluctance to relocate contrary to relocation considered mostly as preferred adaptation. The likelihood of relocating exhibited a non-linear pattern, decreasing only when a population was younger until age 55 before reversing. Indigenous households preferred not to relocate. In communities where place attachment and revenue sources significantly impacted relocation decisions, households with secondary education, past flood experiences, and non-indigenous status influenced higher perception of flood risk. Therefore, relocation as an effective global adaptation strategy to floods is not widespread. Thus, empowering households to accept a certain level of flood risk potentially avoids maladaptation and involves a combination of hard infrastructure measures and regulatory approaches in places of residence that do not compromise livelihoods. However, if relocation becomes necessary, a right-based approach must be favored over an absolute risk-based approach.

U2 - 10.1111/jfr3.13015

DO - 10.1111/jfr3.13015

M3 - Journal article

VL - 17

JO - Journal of Flood Risk Management

JF - Journal of Flood Risk Management

SN - 1753-318X

IS - 4

M1 - e13015

ER -