Choice of household adaptation strategies to flood risk management in Accra, Ghana

Daniel Kwabena Twerefou, Emmanuel Adu-Danso, Emmanuel Abbey, Benjamin Delali Dovie

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

19 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

In this paper, we discuss the psychological and socio-economic factors as well as the constraints that inhibit private precautionary flood-risk mitigation measures among urban households in the Greater Accra Metropolitan Area of Ghana within the Protection Motivation framework. The results show that threat appraisal has mixed effects on the decisions by households to adopt a damage protection measure against flooding. With regards to coping appraisal, the study found that households who do not feel helpless about flooding in the neighbourhood resort to some structural measures such as reinforcing their house against flood damage. The study also finds that socio-economic factors have an overall positive effect on protective behaviour. Additionally, structural measures taken by the public sector to provide protection against damage from a flood are shown to complement the adoption of some specific private protective measures such as clearing drains and sandbagging by households. We, therefore, recommend policy choices to focus on the provision of the needed community-level flood protection infrastructure since it stimulates private flood precautionary measures.

Original languageEnglish
Article number100023
JournalCity and Environment Interactions
Volume3
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Nov 2019

Keywords

  • Adaptation
  • Damage mitigation
  • Greater Accra Metropolitan Area
  • Natural disasters
  • Private flood precautionary measures
  • Protection motivation

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