Metadata last updated on Jan 19, 2023

Megacity Dhaka encounters various kinds of natural disasters quite frequently owing to its geographical location and a number of other physical and environmental conditions including low topography, land characteristics, multiplicity of rivers and the monsoon climate. Climate and disaster resilience is not the same in all parts of a city. Spatial variations in resilience patterns result from differences in the strengths and weaknesses of the city’s economic, social, physical, institutional or natural aspects across its various parts. Traditional frameworks to assess adaptive capacity at the local level have focused largely on assets and capitals as indicators. While useful in understanding the capacity of a system to cope with disasters and adapt to changing environments, asset-oriented approaches overlook the processes and functions of a system (for example, governance system, community participation in decision-making, knowledge dissemination and management, structure of institutions and entitlements etc.) that are important aspects influencing the capacity of a human system to respond to climate change events.

Metadata
View More
Data Access and Licensing
Classification: Public
This dataset is classified as Public under the Access to Information Classification Policy. Users inside and outside the Bank can access this dataset.
License: Creative Commons Attribution 4.0
This dataset is licensed under Creative Commons Attribution 4.0
Statistics
Views (305)
Downloads (0)
Share Metadata
The information on this page (the dataset metadata) is also available in these formats.
EmailJSON
Emergency Contact Number (US): (202) 458-8888|© 2022 The World Bank Group, All Rights Reserved