Abstract
Rapid urbanization is leading to the expansion of human settlements in flood-prone areas, and the impact is not uniform across different communities. Few studies have comprehensively investigated the flood exposure faced by vulnerable communities in the Global South, where pervasive slums present a major challenge to inclusive urban planning and flood management. Here, combining advanced machine learning techniques and publicly available satellite images, we identify hot spots of urban slum populations in floodplains in the Global South and examine their settlement patterns. We find that approximately one in three people living in slums in the Global South resides in a floodplain. Slum dwellers are 32% more likely to settle in floodplains compared with residents in adequate housing. The concentration of slum populations is particularly high in areas that have experienced severe floods. These data-driven insights highlight the disproportionate flood exposure faced by slum dwellers in the Global South and underscore the need for just and equitable flood adaptation management.
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Data availability
All household-based data are available to download free of charge by registered users from the DHS program (https://www.dhsprogram.com/data/). Satellite images and land cover layer products can be accessed via the GEE platform (https://earthengine.google.com/), specifically including the Landsat images (https://developers.google.com/earth-engine/datasets/catalog/LANDSAT_LC08_C02_T1_L2, https://developers.google.com/earth-engine/datasets/catalog/LANDSAT_LE07_C02_T1_L2), and the Copernicus Global Land Cover Layers (https://developers.google.com/earth-engine/datasets/catalog/COPERNICUS_Landcover_100m_Proba-V-C3_Global). The Global NPP-VIIRS-like nighttime light dataset is from the Harvard Dataverse (https://doi.org/10.7910/DVN/YGIVCD). The Settlement Model grid (GHS-SMOD) and Population Grid (GHS-POP) can be obtained from the Global Human Settlement Layer (https://ghsl.jrc.ec.europa.eu/download.php). The Emergency Events Database (EM-DAT) records and their geocoded extension are obtained from the Centre for Research on the Epidemiology of Disasters (https://www.emdat.be/) and the Socioeconomic Data and Applications Center (https://sedac.ciesin.columbia.edu/data/set/pend-gdis-1960-2018). The administrative boundary data used in this study are publicly available from the GADM database (https://gadm.org/).
Code availability
Codes for reproducibility of the findings are available via Zenodo at https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.14790692 (ref. 84).
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Acknowledgements
This work was supported by the National Natural Science Foundation of China (grant numbers 72033005, 72403147 and 42401379), China Postdoctoral Science Foundation (grant number 2023M732043) and the Shandong Provincial Natural Science Foundation (grant number ZR2023QG076).
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D.L., L.S. and K.F. designed the study. D.L., Y.Y., D.Z. and Y.Z. performed the analysis and prepared the manuscript. L.S., K.F. and N.Z. coordinated and supervised the project. D.L., L.S., K.F., N.Z. and Y.Y. participated in writing and revising the manuscript.
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Li, D., Sun, L., Feng, K. et al. Disproportionate flood exposure for slum populations of the Global South. Nat Cities (2025). https://doi.org/10.1038/s44284-025-00273-3
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/s44284-025-00273-3