By Eric Chu and Kavya Michael
A paper in the latest issue of the journal Environment & Urbanization highlights how urban plans for adapting to climate change often leave out migrant populations living in informal settlements. Guest bloggers Eric Chu and Kavya Michael call for a rethink.
As cities across the global South grapple with climate change, many are designing plans to deal with escalating climate impacts including erratic precipitation and unpredictable shifts in temperature. And in response to global agendas such as the Sustainable Development Goals and the Paris Agreement, these plans seek to integrate basic development priorities while improving access to basic services including water, sanitation and health.
Many approaches encourage decision-makers, scientists, and NGOs to participate in the planning process. However, ‘participatory’ processes often leave marginalized groups out of the picture.
This is particularly true in the global South where high levels of economic inequality, absence of effective leadership, and prevalent political corruption hinder socially accountable and sustainable processes to manage the impacts of climate change.
Our recent study of migrants in the Indian cities of Bengaluru and Surat (open access) highlights the challenges of promoting climate adaptation in places with long histories of social, economic and cultural diversity.
Both cities have progressive plans for adapting to climate change and managing growing climate risk. Still, previous research notes that these cities’ plans tend to favor certain politically important groups and economically important assets such as buildings located in central business districts.
Why are supposedly participatory adaptation plans exclusionary or inequitable? How do we make sense of this contradiction?
Case study: Bengaluru
In the southern city of Bengaluru, studied under the Adaptation at Scale in Semi-Arid Regions (ASSAR) project, we explored how migrants living in flood- and diseases prone informal settlements are coping with exposure to climate change. Precarious living circumstances are compounded by exposure to heat stress often experienced during manual labor such as waste-picking.
Added to these climate vulnerabilities, long-standing social constructs deepen migrants’ challenges. Given their status as unskilled, landless laborers, migrants are regarded as ‘out-of-state’ citizens. This includes members of the Other Backward Classes (OBC) – a term used by the Indian government that encompasses educationally, economically and socially disadvantaged groups.
These groups do not have access to formal public services such as state-based health schemes and subsidized rations of water, foodstuffs and basic supplies. In the event of a disaster, migrants are the most prone to illness and death.
Case study: Surat
Surat was one of the first members of the Asian Cities Climate Change Resilience Network (ACCCRN) and the 100 Resilient Cities programs. Strong political leadership on climate action translated into keen interest from multilateral donors. Local industrialists and business leaders also rapidly learned about the perils of climate change.
However, subsequent plans to implement adaptation programs focused on the needs of local businesses, leaving out the city’s migrant population.
Eventually, plans began to target flood protection for businesses and insulation for formal housing. In the name of ‘urban development’ or ‘climate resilience’, many informal settlements were razed to make way for building flood protection measures and to reinforce embankments.
Having been left out of the plans, migrant communities were forced to relocate. Their increasing exposure to climate risks and lack of political representation led to their displacement, breaking the valuable social and economic networks they need to survive.
Recognizing migrants
Our study shows that city planners persistently fail to recognize migrants in urban adaptation plans and policies. In Bengaluru and Surat, political ideologies, social values, and access to economic opportunities combined work against marginalized groups, excluding them from these plans and processes.
We need a new vocabulary around social justice that recognizes the interests, needs and voices of historically marginalized groups.
Adaptation plans must intentionally allow spaces for recognizing class, caste, gender and age-related implications of proposed actions. Planning processes must take the inclusion of all urban residents seriously – not only those who are privileged, knowledgeable or powerful. This will help to promote plans that bridge the vast inequalities in economic and political power across the global South.
- The April 2019 issue of Environment & Urbanization focuses on more inclusive climate change adaptation. Many of the chapters and papers are open access.
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Previously published on Iied.org and is republished here under a Creative Commons license.
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