2023
DOI: 10.1177/00420980221140999
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Unequal and unjust: The political ecology of Bangkok’s increasing urban heat island

Abstract: The intensity of Bangkok’s urban heat island during the dry season can be as high as 6–7° and in the densest areas the urban heat island’s intensity is approximately 4°C. The urban heat island thus is causing a city already oppressively hot to become even hotter. The urban heat island also contributes to health problems, such as heat stroke and fatigue, particularly to those with lower incomes. We historically examine the numerous causes of Bangkok’s urban heat island, such as the lack of green space, high lev… Show more

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Cited by 10 publications
(3 citation statements)
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“…Low-and lower-middle-income countries may lack su cient urban planning and management resources to address UHI issues, and internal imbalances in resources may also contribute to the disproportionate and uneven growth of SUHII within income groups [41] . Most countries in low and lower-middle income group were located in climate zone A and B.…”
Section: Intra-income Group Variation In Suhiimentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Low-and lower-middle-income countries may lack su cient urban planning and management resources to address UHI issues, and internal imbalances in resources may also contribute to the disproportionate and uneven growth of SUHII within income groups [41] . Most countries in low and lower-middle income group were located in climate zone A and B.…”
Section: Intra-income Group Variation In Suhiimentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Perhaps because they are few and far between, Bangkok's parks have not been at the centre of much social analysis (see e.g. Boonchuen, 2002;Marks and Connell, 2023). 6 Yet green public spaces fit rather snugly into an understanding of precarious urban landscapes.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…It is by now well-known that the effects of climate change, such as heatwaves and air pollution events, are intensified in cities. Specifically, much research has been dedicated the temperature gaps between urban areas and their surroundings, that are increasing globally and raising the risks of illness and mortality, often for lower income residents in particular (Marks, 2023; Mentaschi et al, 2022). However, as Roesler argues in City, Climate, and Architecture , the privileging of the notion of the ‘urban heat island’ as the main paradigm of 20th-century urban climatology reduces urban climate to a phenomenon of outdoor space.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%