Sustainable building materials (SBMs) and their impact on displaced persons health/wellbeing in selected IDP facilities, Nigeria
No Thumbnail Available
Date
2024-08-01
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Frontiers in Materials
Abstract
There are 70.8 million Internally Displaced Persons in the world. In Sub-Saharan
Africa Nigeria has 16.5 million people and the highest displacement rate. IDPs
in Nigeria need shelters primarily to mitigate homelessness and improve their
quality of health through sustainable building materials (SBM) used in design
and construction. The study aimed to investigate SBMs and their impact on the
health/wellbeing of Displaced Persons in IDP facilities to promote the health
benefits of SBMs. Assess the SBMs used to design IDP facilities in the three case
studies; ascertain the health/wellbeing components of the SBMs; and analyse
the impact of SBM on displaced persons’ health/wellbeing. The study used the
mixed (quality and quantitative) research method while leveraging the case study
design. The research philosophy is pragmatism, and the research paradigms
are interpretivist and constructivist. The data collection instrument includes a
questionnaire survey for quantitative data, an in-depth interview guide, and an
observation schedule (direct and participant). The findings reveal that SBMs have
some health benefits, SBMs have impacts on the IDPs’ wellbeing, and SBMs can
be sourced locally. According to the study, SBMs can reflect the people’s culture,
making IDPs homely, happy and comfortable with positive psychosocial impacts
that may improve their mental health.
Description
Keywords
sustainable building materials, camp facility, displaced persons health/wellbeing, internally displaced persons, health/wellbeing components