Dynamic Multi-Factor Flood Risk Assessment in Peri-Urban Areas: Integrating Migration, Exposure, and Community-Level Vulnerability and Capacity
Abstract/Summary
Rapid peri-urban expansion has intensified flood risk in Southeast Asian cities through wetland loss, rural–urban migration, and delayed infrastructure development. This study examines the spatial and temporal dimensions of flood risk in Phnom Penh, Cambodia using a multi-factor framework based on hazard, exposure, vulnerability, and coping capacity. Vulnerability and coping capacity are analysed at both community and household levels. Migrant settlement duration captures differences in exposure and adaptive capacity over time. A composite flood risk index is constructed from survey data using the Rank Order Centroid weighting method. Results show that exposure is the dominant driver of flood risk, exceeding the influence of hazard intensity and largely shaping spatial patterns. Community-level vulnerability and coping capacity exert stronger effects than household-level characteristics, highlighting the importance of infrastructure and local settings. Flood risk varies across migrant groups: new migrants face the highest risk due to elevated exposure and vulnerability, while long-term migrants experience lower risk as adaptive capacity improves over time. However, risk reduction varies across groups, with persistent challenges linked to infrastructure and disaster preparedness systems. These findings highlight the importance of community-scale resilience strategies and targeted infrastructure investment to reduce flood risk in rapidly urbanising cities.
Read the full article here: https://doi.org/10.3390/w18101152