Rural Post-Earthquake Resettlement Mode Choices: Empirical Case Studies of Sichuan, China

Front Public Health. 2022 May 12:10:861497. doi: 10.3389/fpubh.2022.861497. eCollection 2022.

Abstract

Earthquakes occur frequently in rural areas of Sichuan, China, causing huge damage and high mortality. The built environment plays a significant role in providing residents with safe and resilient settlements in such areas. There is yet little research on how rural families in developing countries cope with geological disasters like earthquakes, and how built environmental factors would influence their resettlement choices which would directly affect their quality of life afterward. Urban planning activities should be accompanied by these insights to design and create human-centric resettlements accordingly. In this study, the resettlement choices after three major earthquakes in Sichuan were studied for this reason. Random sampling and face-to-face questionnaire surveys were combined with factor analysis and binary logistic regression to understand the resettlement modes desired by the residents and the influencing factors. The results show that residents who have lived in their current places long and whose houses were not built recently are more likely to choose the in-situ resettlement. Accessibility to employment and public services has a significant impact on residents' choice of in-situ resettlement or reallocated resettlement, and so does the previous resettlement experience. The research results can provide useful suggestions for Chinese rural area post-earthquake resettlement planning following a human-centric approach with empirical data.

Keywords: Changning earthquake; Lushan earthquake; Wenchuan earthquake; binary logistic regression; factor analysis; influencing factor; post-earthquake resettlement mode.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • China
  • Disasters*
  • Earthquakes*
  • Humans
  • Quality of Life
  • Rural Population