Data di Pubblicazione:
2021
Abstract:
Outgoing migration flows can influence demand, availability, location and quality of housing in the areas from
which they originate, through dynamics such as remittance transfer and investment, cultural change, demographic
decline and loss of skilled work. These dynamics may have diverse implications on disaster risk,
potentially affecting the occurrence or intensity of some hazardous events and determining the levels of exposure
and vulnerability of people and assets.
This paper retraces the evolution of the housing stock as a product of outmigration in San Mango sul Calore
and Cavallerizzo di Cerzeto, two mountain villages in Italy’s Southern Apennines, in the decades preceding
recent disasters. Over the second half of the 20th century, both municipalities witnessed intense outmigration,
contributing to the expansion of their respective settlements’ housing stock and the abandonment of traditional
land-use patterns and building practices. These processes shaped hazard exposure and disaster vulnerability of
different people in each community, producing a diversity of risk reduction and risk creation outcomes.
This paper analyses the context-specific migration trajectories and risk outcomes in the two study areas,
framing them through the findings of the global literature on migration, development and DRR, to identify
theoretical implications and operational approaches relevant to understanding and addressing migrationhousing-
risk dynamics. Its insights can support risk reduction in places experiencing intense population outflows
and related demographic and physical transformations.
which they originate, through dynamics such as remittance transfer and investment, cultural change, demographic
decline and loss of skilled work. These dynamics may have diverse implications on disaster risk,
potentially affecting the occurrence or intensity of some hazardous events and determining the levels of exposure
and vulnerability of people and assets.
This paper retraces the evolution of the housing stock as a product of outmigration in San Mango sul Calore
and Cavallerizzo di Cerzeto, two mountain villages in Italy’s Southern Apennines, in the decades preceding
recent disasters. Over the second half of the 20th century, both municipalities witnessed intense outmigration,
contributing to the expansion of their respective settlements’ housing stock and the abandonment of traditional
land-use patterns and building practices. These processes shaped hazard exposure and disaster vulnerability of
different people in each community, producing a diversity of risk reduction and risk creation outcomes.
This paper analyses the context-specific migration trajectories and risk outcomes in the two study areas,
framing them through the findings of the global literature on migration, development and DRR, to identify
theoretical implications and operational approaches relevant to understanding and addressing migrationhousing-
risk dynamics. Its insights can support risk reduction in places experiencing intense population outflows
and related demographic and physical transformations.
Tipologia CRIS:
1.1 Articolo in rivista
Keywords:
Migration
Depopulation
Housing
Remittances
Land-use planning
Demographic decline
Vernacular architecture
Landslide
Earthquake
Realised risk
Risk construction
Elenco autori:
Guadagno, Lorenzo; Guadagno, Eleonora
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