Resettling at the Precipice: Deepening Vulnerabilities in Disaster Recovery from Upland Sulawesi

We analyze a 2006 landslide disaster in Indonesia that caused two neighboring villages to rebuild on increasingly precarious terrain. We use the pressure and release (PAR) model to examine natural hazards and disaster from a historical perspective, situating the origins of vulnerability among commun...

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Veröffentlicht in:Human Ecology 2023-08, Vol.51 (4), p.737-751
Hauptverfasser: Sirimorok, Nurhady, Batiran, Karno B., Fisher, Micah R., Verheijen, Bart, Nursaputra, Munajat, Sahide, Muhammad Alif K.
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container_issue 4
container_start_page 737
container_title Human Ecology
container_volume 51
creator Sirimorok, Nurhady
Batiran, Karno B.
Fisher, Micah R.
Verheijen, Bart
Nursaputra, Munajat
Sahide, Muhammad Alif K.
description We analyze a 2006 landslide disaster in Indonesia that caused two neighboring villages to rebuild on increasingly precarious terrain. We use the pressure and release (PAR) model to examine natural hazards and disaster from a historical perspective, situating the origins of vulnerability among communities pushed to resettle in increasingly dangerous areas. From 2011, we conducted an initial five months of field research in two villages in Upland Sulawesi, followed by sustained engagement to trace the siting and reconstruction of settlements in locations highly prone to landslides in order to understand the conditions that led communities to rebuild in locations at heightened risk from similar landslide events. In doing so we extend research on the ways vulnerability and disaster risk extend into processes of recovery. Our extended analysis highlights the relational and unequal adaptive capacities unfolding among villagers. Our findings revealed that a combination of government development policies and market mechanisms established the roots of differentiated vulnerabilities, which were thereafter reinforced through disaster recovery planning and reconstruction initiatives. Thus, we show that risk and resilience are not only connected to a disaster event but also to efforts to rebuild and recover, illustrating how vulnerability is reproduced alongside initiatives intended to help communities recuperate and build resilience.
doi_str_mv 10.1007/s10745-023-00422-z
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source PAIS Index; SpringerNature Journals; Sociological Abstracts
subjects Anthropology
Community
Development policy
Disaster management
Disaster recovery
Disaster risk
Disasters
Emergency management
Emergency preparedness
Environmental Management
Fieldwork
Geography
Historical development
Indonesia
Landslides
Landslides & mudslides
Post-disaster reconstruction
Reconstruction
Recovery plans
Relocation
Resilience
Risk
Social Sciences
Sociology
Villages
Vulnerability
title Resettling at the Precipice: Deepening Vulnerabilities in Disaster Recovery from Upland Sulawesi
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