Abstract

Abstract. In Bangladesh, socio-economic and hydrological processes are both extremely dynamic and inter-related. Human population patterns are often explained as a response, or adaptation strategy, to physical events, e.g. flooding, salt-water intrusion, and erosion. Meanwhile, these physical processes are exacerbated, or mitigated, by diverse human interventions, e.g. river diversion, levees and polders. In this context, this paper describes an attempt to explore the complex interplay between floods and societies in Bangladeshi floodplains. In particular, we performed a spatially-distributed analysis of the interactions between the dynamics of human settlements and flood inundation patterns. To this end, we used flooding simulation results from inundation modelling, LISFLOOD-FP, as well as global datasets of population distribution data, such as the Gridded Population of the World (20 years, from 1990 to 2010) and HYDE datasets (310 years, from 1700 to 2010). The outcomes of this work highlight the behaviour of Bangladeshi floodplains as complex human–water systems and indicate the need to go beyond the traditional narratives based on one-way cause–effects, e.g. climate change leading to migrations.

Highlights

  • Much progress has been made in the field of flood risk over the past decades (e.g. Apel et al 2009, Pappenberger et al 2012, Winsemius et al 2013)

  • This paper describes an initial attempt to explore the interplay between floods and societies in Bangladeshi floodplains

  • This study shows that, while the number of people living in Bangladeshi has grown remarkably over the past decades (Fig. 2), the proportion of people living in floodplain areas has not significantly changed

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Summary

INTRODUCTION

Much progress has been made in the field of flood risk over the past decades (e.g. Apel et al 2009, Pappenberger et al 2012, Winsemius et al 2013). The interplay between human population dynamics and flooding in Bangladesh: a spatial analysis 189 These knowledge gaps are compounded by current approaches of development interventions and policy prescriptions dealing with flood disaster response, flood management, urban flood resilience and urban development, which tend to still be sectoral and top-down oriented. In this context, this paper describes an initial attempt to explore the interplay between floods and societies in Bangladeshi floodplains. We performed a spatially-distributed analysis of the flood inundation patterns and dynamics of human settlements over recent decades

METHOD
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DISCUSSION AND CONCLUSIONS
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