4.6 Article

The legacy of vulnerability to floods in the Tana River, Kenya

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ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.ijdrr.2022.102833

Keywords

Hazards; Disasters; Floods; Vulnerability; Laws; Policies

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This paper aims to understand the vulnerability of ethnic groups living in flood-prone areas due to historical economic development policies and laws. Using a case study of Tana River County in Kenya, the research examines the impact of economic development policies on the physical, structural, and social aspects of floods, and how they contribute to vulnerability. The study reveals that the implementation of economic development policies and legal frameworks has directly influenced vulnerability to floods and produced new forms of vulnerability for floodplain inhabitants.
Floods are the most recurring, widespread, disastrous, and frequent natural hazards in the world. This paper aims to understand vulnerability among ethnic groups living in areas prone to floods because of historical development and implementation of laws and policies. I use the Tana River County in Kenya as a case study to answer the question: what role have economic development policies, laws, and their implementation played in the propagation of drivers of vulnerability through history? I apply the Integrated Approach to Natural Hazards by establishing the previous and current influence of economic development policies on physical, structural, and social dimensions of floods among the region's vulnerable inhabitants. Vulnerability to floods is the longterm culmination of enacted economic development policies and laws that can be ascertained through a review of historical records. To explore the historical narrative of Tana River County, I searched through archived county-specific historical records. To determine the present narrative, I collected data from inhabitants of purposively sampled villages of Tana Delta Sub-County using focus group discussions and I administered key informant interviews to government and nongovernmental organizations located in Tana River County. I report that the implementation and institution of economic development policy and legal frameworks under both colonial and post-colonial governments have directly influenced physical, structural, and social dimensions of floods by both increasing vulnerability and producing new forms of vulnerability for floodplain inhabitants. This understanding is vital to local, national, and regional administrators involved in development and implementation of current and future hazard management strategies.

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