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Journal ArticleDOI

At Risk: Natural Hazards, People's Vulnerability, and Disasters.

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TLDR
The authors argue that the social, political and economic environment is as much a cause of disasters as the natural environment and that the concept of vulnerability is central to an understanding of disasters and their prevention or mitigation, exploring the extent and ways in which people gain access to resources.
Abstract
Many disasters are a complex mix of natural hazards and human action. At Risk argues that the social, political and economic environment is as much a cause of disasters as the natural environment. Published within the International Decade of Natural Hazard Reduction, this book suggests ways in which both the social and natural sciences can be analytically combined through a 'disaster pressure and release' model. Arguing that the concept of vulnerability is central to an understanding of disasters and their prevention or mitigation, the authors explore the extent and ways in which people gain access to resources. Individual chapters apply analytical concepts to famines and drought, biological hazards, floods, coastal storms, and earthquakes, volcanos and landslides - the hazards that become disasters'. Finally, the book draws practical and policy conclusions to promote a safer environment and reduce vulnerability.

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Citations
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Exploring the link between climate change and migration

TL;DR: In this paper, the connection between climate change and migration via two mechanisms, sea level rise and floods, is investigated and depicted in conceptual models, and a connection can be traced and the linkages are made explicit.
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Post-disaster recovery dilemmas: challenges in balancing short-term and long-term needs for vulnerability reduction

TL;DR: In this paper, the impacts of the buffer zone policy from its inception, days after the 26 December 2004 tsunami hit the island, until its revision, approximately 10 months following the disaster.
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Review article: resilience, poverty and development

TL;DR: The authors assess the advantages and limits of resilience in the context of development and show that resilience has important limitations and is not a pro-poor concept, in particular, it does not exclusively apply to, or benefit, the poor.
Journal ArticleDOI

Land-Change Science and Political Ecology: Similarities, Differences, and Implications for Sustainability Science

TL;DR: Convergence is revealed in the identification of the complexity of the interactions and the importance of context in land-change outcomes and in the general consensus found in such synthesis issues as forest transition and sustainability themes.
Journal ArticleDOI

Social vulnerability and the natural and built environment: a model of flood casualties in Texas.

TL;DR: This research void is addressed by analysing 832 countywide flood events in Texas from 1997-2001 to examine whether geographic localities characterised by high percentages of socially vulnerable populations experience significantly more casualties due to flood events, adjusting for characteristics of the natural and built environment.
References
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Book ChapterDOI

8. The Rules of the Game

John Davis, +1 more