Abstract

Flood disasters continue to wreak havoc on the lives of millions of people worldwide, causing death and massive economic losses. In most African cities, residents and their assets are among the most vulnerable to flood risks in the world. The nature and scale of this urban risk are changing because of the dynamic patterns of land use, unplanned growth and impacts of climate change. Flood risk is the product of the flood hazards, the vulnerability and exposure of the people and their physical environment. In order to minimise flood disaster, there is an urgent need to understand, invest in flood disaster risk reduction for resilience and to enhance disaster preparedness for an effective response as articulated in the recent Sendai Framework for Disaster Risk Reduction. This research utilises a new proposed flood vulnerability assessment framework for flood risk in a traditional community in the heart of Ibadan metropolis, in the context of their households’ exposure, susceptibility and coping capacity through a well-designed questionnaire survey. The study uses descriptive and inferential statistics techniques to provide a detailed understanding of the vulnerability profiles of the community and the levels of residents’ preparedness to mitigate the flood risk. The results of the statistical analysis show that there is a significant relationship between residents’ flood awareness and having previous flood experience, but there is no significant association between their awareness of risk and the level of preparedness for flooding. To minimise exposure and vulnerability to flood risk, we advocate effective adaptation policies to achieve disaster risk reduction and resilience on flood risk rather than focusing merely on reactive measures after disaster strikes.

Highlights

  • It is widely acknowledged that human interference with the climate system has been the major cause of climate change and the observed global warming (Hansen et al 2007; Ramanathan & Feng 2008; Rockström et al 2009)

  • Sixteen per cent of all respondents comprised between 1 and 3 occupants in their households. This is consistent with the average household size of Ibadan city according to 1991 National Population Census reports (Tomori 2008), and it is similar to the findings of an empirical study on household vulnerability to food poverty in Ibadan metropolis (Odusina 2013)

  • This study provides an evaluation of a human settlement’s vulnerability to flooding risk in Bere, an indigenous community situated at the heart of Ibadan metropolis, Nigeria

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Summary

Introduction

It is widely acknowledged that human interference with the climate system has been the major cause of climate change and the observed global warming (Hansen et al 2007; Ramanathan & Feng 2008; Rockström et al 2009). It is the focus of this study to assess the vulnerability of an indigenous community in the core area of Ibadan to flood risks, measuring the residents’ exposure, resilience and adaptive capacity using physical and socio-economic variables.

Results
Conclusion
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