Entrepreneurial Strategies to Address Rural-Urban Climate-Induced Vulnerabilities: Assessing Adaptation and Innovation Measures in Dhaka, Bangladesh

Jason Miklian, Kristian Hoelscher

Sustainability, 2020

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Climate change amplifies social, political, economic, infrastructural and environmental challenges in many Global South cities, and perhaps no city is more vulnerable than Bangladesh's capital of Dhaka. Climate-induced rural-urban migration is a profound concern, and Dhaka's political leaders have embraced technology-based innovation as one solution pathway. This article explores the societal impact of Dhaka's innovation environment strategies for climate change adaptation and mitigation. Employing a case study qualitative methodology, our three findings expand knowledge about innovation for urban climate adaptation and mitigation as understood by Dhaka-based entrepreneurs. First, the most effective innovations were not the most technologically advanced, but those with the highest degree of participant ownership. Second, gaps between recipient, corporate and governmental understandings of effective mitigation and adaptation harmed projects were driven by different definitions of risk and competing understandings of vulnerability. Third, even the most technical climate adaptation measures were inherently political in their application. We discuss how to better position urban climate innovation infrastructures in Bangladesh and beyond, including developing a better recognition of innovation lifecycles for urban climate adaptation and widening our definitions of "innovation" to better incorporate more effective and inclusive climate adaptation solutions.

Key Messages

  • In Dhaka, the most effective climate-adaptation innovations were not the most technologically advanced but those with the highest participant ownership.
  • Mismatched definitions of risk and vulnerability among recipients, corporations, and government harmed climate adaptation projects.
  • Even highly technical climate-adaptation measures proved inherently political in how they were applied.

Research Topics

climate change entrepreneurship Dhaka Bangladesh urban vulnerability adaptation innovation

Citation

Jason Miklian, Kristian Hoelscher. "Entrepreneurial Strategies to Address Rural-Urban Climate-Induced Vulnerabilities: Assessing Adaptation and Innovation Measures in Dhaka, Bangladesh." Sustainability, 2020.

Related Research Areas

BibTeX Citation
@article{miklian2020_entrepreneurial_strategies_to,
  title = {Entrepreneurial Strategies to Address Rural-Urban Climate-Induced Vulnerabilities: Assessing Adaptation and Innovation Measures in Dhaka, Bangladesh},
  author = {Miklian, Jason and Hoelscher, Kristian},
  journal = {Sustainability},
  year = {2020},
  url = {https://www.mdpi.com/2071-1050/12/21/9115/htm}
}