Challenges of Urban Resilience in India

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Publication language
English
Pages
12pp
Date published
31 Mar 2015
Publisher
Southasiadisasters.net
Type
Articles
Keywords
Disaster preparedness, resilience and risk reduction, Environment & climate, Governance, Urban
Countries
India

Rapid urbanisation has emerged as an undeniable global trend. Ever since 2008, more people in the world live in urban areas than in the countryside. In 2014 alone, 54% of the world's population resides in urban areas. This puts an extraordinary level of pressure on urban centres which account for only 2.8% of the world's land area. All these facts point to the distending of urban infrastructure and services beyond their carrying capacity. This leaves these urban areas highly vulnerable to new risks. India's urban infrastructure too is at risk with a projected surge in the number of its urban dwellers reaching 404 million by 2050.

This issue of Southasiadisasters.net focuses on the Challenges of Urban Resilience in India. As repeated disasters have struck India's urban centres, new risks and vulnerabilities have emerged. Weak institutional frameworks and gross social inequalities make the urban centres of the country particularly susceptible to the adverse impacts of disasters. Climate change has added another level of complexity to the mire of existing vulnerabilities. In this context, this issue tries to explore underlying facts, observable trends and the projected impacts of these urban risks and their implications on urban resilience in India.

Contents of this issue include: (i) What is Missing in India's Urban Resilience?; (ii) Risk on the Structural Margins; (iii) Chennai and its Urban Environmental Risks; (iv) Urban Risks and Vulnerabilities in India; (v) Urban Resilience in Uttar Pradesh; (vi) Lima to Delhi: What can be Learned on Urban Resilience?; (vii) Sericulture – A Potential but Vulnerable Source of Livelihood in Flood-prone Dhemaji Assam.