The influence of land tenure and dwelling occupancy on disaster risk reduction. The case of eight informal settlements in six Latin American and Caribbean countries

Purpose: This study seeks to understand how land tenure security and dwelling occupancy modes influence disaster risk reduction in precarious urban communities. Design/methodology/approach: We conducted a comprehensive review of recent publications on the relationship between land tenure security, a...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Juan Pablo Sarmiento, Vicente Sandoval, Meenakshi Jerath
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2020-01-01
Series:Progress in Disaster Science
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2590061719300547
_version_ 1818897791312723968
author Juan Pablo Sarmiento
Vicente Sandoval
Meenakshi Jerath
author_facet Juan Pablo Sarmiento
Vicente Sandoval
Meenakshi Jerath
author_sort Juan Pablo Sarmiento
collection DOAJ
description Purpose: This study seeks to understand how land tenure security and dwelling occupancy modes influence disaster risk reduction in precarious urban communities. Design/methodology/approach: We conducted a comprehensive review of recent publications on the relationship between land tenure security, access to credit, housing improvements, and the expected outcome: safer housing and thus risk reduction. We used a database of surveys from a previous study conducted by the authors in eight informal settlements across six Latin American and Caribbean countries in 2017–2018. Bivariate correlation and Point-Biserial correlations analyses were conducted, using the stepwise variable selection for all regressions. This study assesses whether dwelling occupancy mode and land tenure situation predict the changes in disaster risk factors such as dwellings' physical conditions and occupants' social conditions. Findings: Our extensive literature review reveals: (1) securing housing occupancy alone does not automatically address the issue of credit access, nor does it result in house improvement that lead to safer housing; and (2) households with land tenure or occupancy issues that are exposed to natural hazards are frequently excluded from aid distribution and post-disaster reconstruction programs which increases their vulnerability to future disasters. Our statistical analysis found a positive relationship between consolidated mode of occupancy and land tenure with disaster risk factors associated with housing conditions, particularly access to utilities (i.e., water, sewage, and energy). Originality/value: Our study is the result of a systematic process framed within an evidence-based DRR evaluation strategy that brings forth the scope of measures to secure land tenure conditions and consolidate house occupancy modes as means to improve safety and quality of life in informal settlements that ultimately influence the susceptibility of communities to the impacts of natural hazards. Keywords: Land tenure, Dwelling occupancy, Disaster risk reduction, Urban risk, Precariousness, Informal settlements
first_indexed 2024-12-19T19:21:47Z
format Article
id doaj.art-604dec67f8cf49a1b8e659d29d12b11a
institution Directory Open Access Journal
issn 2590-0617
language English
last_indexed 2024-12-19T19:21:47Z
publishDate 2020-01-01
publisher Elsevier
record_format Article
series Progress in Disaster Science
spelling doaj.art-604dec67f8cf49a1b8e659d29d12b11a2022-12-21T20:08:58ZengElsevierProgress in Disaster Science2590-06172020-01-015The influence of land tenure and dwelling occupancy on disaster risk reduction. The case of eight informal settlements in six Latin American and Caribbean countriesJuan Pablo Sarmiento0Vicente Sandoval1Meenakshi Jerath2Florida International University, USA; Disaster Resilience in the Americas Program (DRCAP), Miami, FL 33199, USA; Corresponding author at: Florida International University, USA.Florida International University, USA; Disaster Resilience in the Americas Program (DRCAP), Miami, FL 33199, USAFlorida International University, USA; Disaster Resilience in the Americas Program (DRCAP), Miami, FL 33199, USAPurpose: This study seeks to understand how land tenure security and dwelling occupancy modes influence disaster risk reduction in precarious urban communities. Design/methodology/approach: We conducted a comprehensive review of recent publications on the relationship between land tenure security, access to credit, housing improvements, and the expected outcome: safer housing and thus risk reduction. We used a database of surveys from a previous study conducted by the authors in eight informal settlements across six Latin American and Caribbean countries in 2017–2018. Bivariate correlation and Point-Biserial correlations analyses were conducted, using the stepwise variable selection for all regressions. This study assesses whether dwelling occupancy mode and land tenure situation predict the changes in disaster risk factors such as dwellings' physical conditions and occupants' social conditions. Findings: Our extensive literature review reveals: (1) securing housing occupancy alone does not automatically address the issue of credit access, nor does it result in house improvement that lead to safer housing; and (2) households with land tenure or occupancy issues that are exposed to natural hazards are frequently excluded from aid distribution and post-disaster reconstruction programs which increases their vulnerability to future disasters. Our statistical analysis found a positive relationship between consolidated mode of occupancy and land tenure with disaster risk factors associated with housing conditions, particularly access to utilities (i.e., water, sewage, and energy). Originality/value: Our study is the result of a systematic process framed within an evidence-based DRR evaluation strategy that brings forth the scope of measures to secure land tenure conditions and consolidate house occupancy modes as means to improve safety and quality of life in informal settlements that ultimately influence the susceptibility of communities to the impacts of natural hazards. Keywords: Land tenure, Dwelling occupancy, Disaster risk reduction, Urban risk, Precariousness, Informal settlementshttp://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2590061719300547
spellingShingle Juan Pablo Sarmiento
Vicente Sandoval
Meenakshi Jerath
The influence of land tenure and dwelling occupancy on disaster risk reduction. The case of eight informal settlements in six Latin American and Caribbean countries
Progress in Disaster Science
title The influence of land tenure and dwelling occupancy on disaster risk reduction. The case of eight informal settlements in six Latin American and Caribbean countries
title_full The influence of land tenure and dwelling occupancy on disaster risk reduction. The case of eight informal settlements in six Latin American and Caribbean countries
title_fullStr The influence of land tenure and dwelling occupancy on disaster risk reduction. The case of eight informal settlements in six Latin American and Caribbean countries
title_full_unstemmed The influence of land tenure and dwelling occupancy on disaster risk reduction. The case of eight informal settlements in six Latin American and Caribbean countries
title_short The influence of land tenure and dwelling occupancy on disaster risk reduction. The case of eight informal settlements in six Latin American and Caribbean countries
title_sort influence of land tenure and dwelling occupancy on disaster risk reduction the case of eight informal settlements in six latin american and caribbean countries
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2590061719300547
work_keys_str_mv AT juanpablosarmiento theinfluenceoflandtenureanddwellingoccupancyondisasterriskreductionthecaseofeightinformalsettlementsinsixlatinamericanandcaribbeancountries
AT vicentesandoval theinfluenceoflandtenureanddwellingoccupancyondisasterriskreductionthecaseofeightinformalsettlementsinsixlatinamericanandcaribbeancountries
AT meenakshijerath theinfluenceoflandtenureanddwellingoccupancyondisasterriskreductionthecaseofeightinformalsettlementsinsixlatinamericanandcaribbeancountries
AT juanpablosarmiento influenceoflandtenureanddwellingoccupancyondisasterriskreductionthecaseofeightinformalsettlementsinsixlatinamericanandcaribbeancountries
AT vicentesandoval influenceoflandtenureanddwellingoccupancyondisasterriskreductionthecaseofeightinformalsettlementsinsixlatinamericanandcaribbeancountries
AT meenakshijerath influenceoflandtenureanddwellingoccupancyondisasterriskreductionthecaseofeightinformalsettlementsinsixlatinamericanandcaribbeancountries