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Author(s) José de Jesús Flores Durán Irasema Alcántara-Ayala

Recurrent risk and the disaster loop: A forensic approach to urban flooding

Source
International Journal of Disaster Risk Reduction (Elsevier)

This publication examines how recurrent flooding in Guadalajara, Mexico, is not the result of isolated hydrometeorological events but the outcome of long-standing socio-spatial, institutional, and historical processes shaped by inequality, governance constraints, and unplanned urbanisation. Using a forensic, retrospective longitudinal approach, the study traces how successive phases of urban development on unsuitable land, socio-spatial segregation, and uneven infrastructure provision have consolidated and reproduced flood risk over time. 

It finds that predominantly reactive, engineering-focused institutional responses have reduced immediate impacts while reinforcing the structural conditions that sustain risk. To explain this dynamic, the authors introduce the concept of the disaster loop, a self-reinforcing cycle in which governance practices and development trajectories continually regenerate vulnerability. The study concludes that breaking this cycle requires integrated, corrective, and forward-looking territorial planning that addresses the systemic roots of risk, with broader relevance for rapidly urbanising contexts where inequality and fragmented governance drive chronic disaster patterns.

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Last checked: 26 January 2026

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Explore further

Hazards Flood
Themes Urban risk and planning
Country and region Mexico
Recurrent risk and the disaster loop: A forensic approach to urban flooding thumbnail
ISBN/ISSN/DOI
10.1016/j.ijdrr.2026.106028 (DOI)
Number of pages
16
Publication year
2026

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