Toward negotiated mitigation of landslide risks in informal settlements: reflections from a pilot experience in Medellín, Colombia

Urbanization continues to drive informal settlement growth on land exposed to hazards such as landslides, increasing risk among low-income populations. Though technical and social ways of managing landslide risk are known, in developing countries these measures are often difficult to implement becau...

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Main Authors: Harry Smith, Françoise Coupé, Soledad Garcia-Ferrari, Helena Rivera, Wilmar Edgardo Castro Mera
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Resilience Alliance 2020-03-01
Series:Ecology and Society
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.ecologyandsociety.org/vol25/iss1/art19/
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spelling doaj-3830093a180d41ee96151c31c6aac3532020-11-25T03:02:18ZengResilience AllianceEcology and Society1708-30872020-03-012511910.5751/ES-11337-25011911337Toward negotiated mitigation of landslide risks in informal settlements: reflections from a pilot experience in Medellín, ColombiaHarry Smith0Françoise Coupé1Soledad Garcia-Ferrari2Helena Rivera3Wilmar Edgardo Castro Mera4Centre for Environment and Human Settlements, The Urban Institute, Heriot-Watt University, Edinburgh, United KingdomEscuela del Habitat, Facultad de Arquitectura, Universidad Nacional de Colombia Sede Medellín, Medellín, ColombiaEdinburgh School of Architecture and Landscape Architecture, Edinburgh College of Art, University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh, United KingdomA Small Studio Ltd. | Architecture + Planning ResearchEscuela del Habitat, Facultad de Arquitectura, Universidad Nacional de Colombia Sede Medellín, Medellín, ColombiaUrbanization continues to drive informal settlement growth on land exposed to hazards such as landslides, increasing risk among low-income populations. Though technical and social ways of managing landslide risk are known, in developing countries these measures are often difficult to implement because of complex social, economic, political, and institutional reasons. We present the findings from a pilot research project in Medellín, Colombia, which aimed to explore the scope for, and acceptability of, landslide risk-reducing strategies for informal settlements from the community and state perspectives; understand the barriers to landslide risk-reducing strategies; and identify politically and practically viable approaches to such strategies within a wider and more complex context of social and physical risk in the area. Focusing on the latter objective, we compare two forms of community-local government spaces for negotiation that were used during the project (a Cabildo Abierto and a joint local government-community Working Group), applying Fung's "democratic cube" to their analysis. This helps understand their different nature, but also raises questions about the ability of Fung's model to address governance arrangements related to so-called informal settlements in the Global South, and the need to revisit this model drawing on context-sensitive approaches and insights on informal governance arrangements from the growing literature on service coproduction. The key conclusions highlight the importance of overcoming the state-community stand-off over land occupation rights in Medellín, which is also found in self-built neighborhoods worldwide, by reorienting the problem away from conventional long-term land use planning issues toward issues of safety in the short and medium term, together with an incremental approach, in opening up opportunities to develop wider negotiated mitigation of landslide risk at a more strategic level involving both community and local government.http://www.ecologyandsociety.org/vol25/iss1/art19/community self-managementcoproductioninformal settlementsland use planninglandslide risk managementlatin americanegotiation
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Harry Smith
Françoise Coupé
Soledad Garcia-Ferrari
Helena Rivera
Wilmar Edgardo Castro Mera
spellingShingle Harry Smith
Françoise Coupé
Soledad Garcia-Ferrari
Helena Rivera
Wilmar Edgardo Castro Mera
Toward negotiated mitigation of landslide risks in informal settlements: reflections from a pilot experience in Medellín, Colombia
Ecology and Society
community self-management
coproduction
informal settlements
land use planning
landslide risk management
latin america
negotiation
author_facet Harry Smith
Françoise Coupé
Soledad Garcia-Ferrari
Helena Rivera
Wilmar Edgardo Castro Mera
author_sort Harry Smith
title Toward negotiated mitigation of landslide risks in informal settlements: reflections from a pilot experience in Medellín, Colombia
title_short Toward negotiated mitigation of landslide risks in informal settlements: reflections from a pilot experience in Medellín, Colombia
title_full Toward negotiated mitigation of landslide risks in informal settlements: reflections from a pilot experience in Medellín, Colombia
title_fullStr Toward negotiated mitigation of landslide risks in informal settlements: reflections from a pilot experience in Medellín, Colombia
title_full_unstemmed Toward negotiated mitigation of landslide risks in informal settlements: reflections from a pilot experience in Medellín, Colombia
title_sort toward negotiated mitigation of landslide risks in informal settlements: reflections from a pilot experience in medellín, colombia
publisher Resilience Alliance
series Ecology and Society
issn 1708-3087
publishDate 2020-03-01
description Urbanization continues to drive informal settlement growth on land exposed to hazards such as landslides, increasing risk among low-income populations. Though technical and social ways of managing landslide risk are known, in developing countries these measures are often difficult to implement because of complex social, economic, political, and institutional reasons. We present the findings from a pilot research project in Medellín, Colombia, which aimed to explore the scope for, and acceptability of, landslide risk-reducing strategies for informal settlements from the community and state perspectives; understand the barriers to landslide risk-reducing strategies; and identify politically and practically viable approaches to such strategies within a wider and more complex context of social and physical risk in the area. Focusing on the latter objective, we compare two forms of community-local government spaces for negotiation that were used during the project (a Cabildo Abierto and a joint local government-community Working Group), applying Fung's "democratic cube" to their analysis. This helps understand their different nature, but also raises questions about the ability of Fung's model to address governance arrangements related to so-called informal settlements in the Global South, and the need to revisit this model drawing on context-sensitive approaches and insights on informal governance arrangements from the growing literature on service coproduction. The key conclusions highlight the importance of overcoming the state-community stand-off over land occupation rights in Medellín, which is also found in self-built neighborhoods worldwide, by reorienting the problem away from conventional long-term land use planning issues toward issues of safety in the short and medium term, together with an incremental approach, in opening up opportunities to develop wider negotiated mitigation of landslide risk at a more strategic level involving both community and local government.
topic community self-management
coproduction
informal settlements
land use planning
landslide risk management
latin america
negotiation
url http://www.ecologyandsociety.org/vol25/iss1/art19/
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