Land-Use Governance of Borderland Protected Areas Under Refugee Expansion and Climate Threats: Evidence from Teknaf, Bangladesh

Journal Article (2026)
Author(s)

Junling Liu (Shanghai Jiaotong University)

Chris Zevenbergen (TU Delft - Architecture and the Built Environment)

Jingyi Lu (Shanghai Jiaotong University)

Qi Qi (Shanghai Jiaotong University)

William Veerbeek (IHE Delft Institute for Water Education)

Sami W. Chowdhury (Altec Consultant Limited (ACL))

Liyuan Qian (Shanghai Jiaotong University)

Research Group
Urban Design
DOI related publication
https://doi.org/10.3390/land15061024 Final published version
More Info
expand_more
Publication Year
2026
Language
English
Research Group
Urban Design
Journal title
Land
Issue number
6
Volume number
15
Article number
1024
Downloads counter
1
Reuse Rights

Other than for strictly personal use, it is not permitted to download, forward or distribute the text or part of it, without the consent of the author(s) and/or copyright holder(s), unless the work is under an open content license such as Creative Commons.

Abstract

In biodiversity-rich borderlands, some humanitarian settlements are rapidly expanding. This creates a profound conflict: refugees need a place to live, and ecosystems need protection. However, how settlement growth spatially affects the ecology surrounding protected areas remains understudied. This study takes as an example the city of Teknaf in Bangladesh, one of the world’s largest refugee gathering areas, to explore how settlement expansion changes the ecological structure and function of protected area boundaries, with a focus on two questions: Are there critical spatial thresholds? What is the role of climate feedback mechanisms? We build an analysis framework that integrates several types of data: multitemporal remote sensing images, land-use changes, ecological indicators (NDVI, LST, HQ), landscape pattern indices, gradient analysis, and 2036 simulations based on the business-as-usual scenario. Through this framework, we identify the ecological threshold at the junction of settlements and forests within the Teknaf Wildlife Sanctuary. The expansion of settlements has turned the landscape, which was originally dominated by vegetation, into fragmented hard patches. At the same time, the habitat is severely degraded, and heat stress intensifies. Notably, a critical transition zone emerges at approximately 300–500 m from the protected area boundary, where landscape fragmentation intensifies, habitat quality declines, and heat stress reaches its peak, highlighting a spatial hotspot of ecological vulnerability. If there are no intervention measures, future scenario simulations show that the continued expansion of settlements will only isolate protected areas and accelerate ecological degradation. On the basis of gradient analysis for spatial diagnosis, we propose a zoning management framework and regeneration landscape strategy with the direct goal of coordinating ecological protection and humanitarian needs in crisis-prone border areas.

Files

Land-15-01024.pdf
(pdf | 48 Mb)
License info not available