Rising temperatures, rising vulnerabilities: Individual and community adaptation to heat stress in urban slums of Bangladesh

Publication date

2025-09-15

Authors

Sultana, Zakia
Mees, Heleen L. P.ORCID 0000-0002-4401-6106ISNI 0000000419508576
Mallick, BORCID 0000-0002-9492-1059ISNI 0000000488518073
Driessen, Peter P. J.ORCID 0000-0002-0724-6666ISNI 0000000140953103
Bailey, AjayORCID 0000-0003-3163-6805ISNI 0000000361573155

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Advisors

Supervisors

Document Type

Article
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cc_by

Abstract

Rising temperatures and intensifying heat stress disproportionately affect low-income urban communities, exacerbating existing inequalities and vulnerabilities amid accelerating climate risks. Slum residents, facing unplanned housing structures and limited access to essential services like water, electricity, and gas, adopt individual and community-driven adaptation strategies to cope with extreme heat. However, the conditions that shape their ability to adapt remain largely underexplored. Employing the Everyone's Adaptation framework, this study examines the key conditions that shape individual and community-level responses to heat stress. Data were collected through a qualitative mixed-methods approach, employing focus group discussions, in-depth interviews, expert interviews, and field observations conducted between June and August 2024 in Korail slum, Dhaka, Bangladesh. Findings indicate that individual resources, such as income, are pivotal to adaptation, while social capital supports community resilience through resource sharing and access to key facilities and services. However, persistent inequalities in resource distribution exacerbate individual vulnerabilities, intensifying the local impacts of global climate change. Participants emphasize the need for long-term adaptation strategies, such as improved housing conditions, over temporary interventions like cooling centers. The findings highlight the necessity of gender-specific and age-sensitive measures, as women face heightened challenges due to the dual responsibilities of household management and paid work and older adults face mobility challenges to access shaded spaces. By analyzing eight conditions across individual, community, and collective levels, this study advances understanding of everyday adaptation practice to heat stress and contributes to more equitable, context-specific adaptation policies that enhance urban resilience and address climate-related vulnerabilities.

Keywords

Community adaptation, Everyone's adaptation conditions, Heat stress, Individual adaptation, Low-income groups, Urban slums, Geography, Planning and Development, Civil and Structural Engineering, Renewable Energy, Sustainability and the Environment, Transportation, SDG 7 - Affordable and Clean Energy, SDG 11 - Sustainable Cities and Communities, SDG 13 - Climate Action

Citation

Sultana, Z, Mees, H L P, Mallick, B, Driessen, P P J & Bailey, A 2025, 'Rising temperatures, rising vulnerabilities : Individual and community adaptation to heat stress in urban slums of Bangladesh', Sustainable Cities and Society, vol. 132, 106803. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.scs.2025.106803