Predicting housing deprivation from space in the slums of Dhaka

Author:

Patel Amit1ORCID,Borja-Vega Christian2,Mimmi Luisa M2,Soukup Tomas3,Kolomaznik Jan4,Bhan Tanushree1,Mundt Marcia D1,Lee Hyunjung1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Public Policy and Public Affairs, University of Massachusetts Boston, Boston, MA, USA

2. Global Water Practice, World Bank Group, Washington, DC, USA

3. Geographic Information Systems, GISAT, Czech Republic

4. Remote Sensing, GISAT, Czech Republic

Abstract

Cities in developing countries have been struggling to deal with the pressures of urbanization on infrastructure, basic services, land, and housing that often manifest as poor living conditions found in slums and informal settlements. One of the key challenges to effectively target policy interventions and meet Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) for improving lives of people living in slums is the lack of data on their housing condition. Furthermore, the slum/non-slum dichotomy is inadequate in identifying specific deprivations that prevents effective policymaking and implementation. To this end, we propose a methodological framework to predict multidimensional housing deprivation with slums of Dhaka, Bangladesh as our case study. Our framework predicts multidimensional housing deprivation using geospatial and remote sensing variables. Several indicators, including distance to the central business district, arterial roads, major road junctions, railroads, average dwelling size, and street type within slums were related to increased risk of overall deprivation whereas proximity to heavy industry and shoreline, building density, informal street pattern, the low-level connectivity and proximity to social amenities were related to lower risk of housing deprivation. The results from the statistical models indicate their potential to predict the extent and type of housing deprivation, which could in turn support planning and policy interventions for achieving SDGs for the most vulnerable populations in slums of developing countries.

Funder

World Bank Group

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law,Nature and Landscape Conservation,Urban Studies,Geography, Planning and Development,Architecture

Reference46 articles.

1. Factors in building resilience in urban slums of Dhaka, Bangladesh

2. Arimah BC (2001) Slums as expressions of social exclusion: explaining the prevalence of slums in African countries. Mimeo: UN-Habitat. http://www1.oecd.org/development/pgd/46837274.pdf

3. Neglecting the urban poor in Bangladesh: research, policy and action in the context of climate change

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