Roanne van Voorst - Routledge Humanitarian Studies: Natural Hazards, Risk and Vulnerability : Floods and Slum Life in Indonesia read book DJV, PDF, TXT
9781138860537 1138860530 Different people handle risk in different ways, and the current lack of understanding about this heterogeneity in risk behaviour makes it difficult to intervene more effectively in risk-prone communities. This book offers new and long awaited insights on how the poorest and most vulnerable people in urban societies, cope with an increasingly risky environment. Drawing on first-hand fieldwork in an urban flood-prone slum in Indonesias capital, the megacity Jakarta which is one of the most vulnerable areas worldwide in terms of exposure to natural hazards, the book contributes a rare view from below to the theoretical debates about human risk behaviour. The book questions dominant ideas of experts about what it means to act rationally and safely in a context of risk. It proposes a radically new idea to understand what drives human behaviour in the face of risk by arguing that human risk behaviour cannot be explained by the risk itself, but instead by factors that seem unrelated to the risk at first sight, such as people s trust in authorities and aid-institutions, unequal power structures that limit or advantage people, and the problems and dilemmas that people encounter in their daily lives. Through powerful stories and case studies, as well as an incisive theoretical point of view, the book gives policymakers and scholars of risk and disaster a categorization that helps to come to grips with heterogeneous risk-behaviour and that helps to analyse and understand why different people respond differently to a single risk-event.", Different people handle risk in different ways. The current lack of understanding about this heterogeneity in risk behaviour makes it difficult to intervene effectively in risk-prone communities. Natural Hazards, Risk and Vulnerability offers a unique insight in the everyday life of a group of riverbank settlers in Jakarta - one of the most vulnerable areas worldwide in terms of exposure to natural hazards. Based on long-term fieldwork, the book portrays the often creative and innovative ways in which slum dwellers cope with recurrent floods. The book shows that behaviour that is often described as irrational or ineffective by outside experts can be highly pragmatic and often effective. This book argues that human risk behaviour cannot be explained by the risk itself, but instead by seemingly unrelated factors such as trust in authorities and aid-institutions and unequal power structures. By considering a risk as a lens that exposes these factors, a completely new type of analysis is proposed that offers useful insights for everyone concerned about how people cope with the currently increasing amount of natural hazard. This is a valuable resource for academics, researchers and policy makers in the areas of risk studies, disaster and natural hazard, urban studies, anthropology, development, Southeast Asian studies and Indonesia studies.
9781138860537 1138860530 Different people handle risk in different ways, and the current lack of understanding about this heterogeneity in risk behaviour makes it difficult to intervene more effectively in risk-prone communities. This book offers new and long awaited insights on how the poorest and most vulnerable people in urban societies, cope with an increasingly risky environment. Drawing on first-hand fieldwork in an urban flood-prone slum in Indonesias capital, the megacity Jakarta which is one of the most vulnerable areas worldwide in terms of exposure to natural hazards, the book contributes a rare view from below to the theoretical debates about human risk behaviour. The book questions dominant ideas of experts about what it means to act rationally and safely in a context of risk. It proposes a radically new idea to understand what drives human behaviour in the face of risk by arguing that human risk behaviour cannot be explained by the risk itself, but instead by factors that seem unrelated to the risk at first sight, such as people s trust in authorities and aid-institutions, unequal power structures that limit or advantage people, and the problems and dilemmas that people encounter in their daily lives. Through powerful stories and case studies, as well as an incisive theoretical point of view, the book gives policymakers and scholars of risk and disaster a categorization that helps to come to grips with heterogeneous risk-behaviour and that helps to analyse and understand why different people respond differently to a single risk-event.", Different people handle risk in different ways. The current lack of understanding about this heterogeneity in risk behaviour makes it difficult to intervene effectively in risk-prone communities. Natural Hazards, Risk and Vulnerability offers a unique insight in the everyday life of a group of riverbank settlers in Jakarta - one of the most vulnerable areas worldwide in terms of exposure to natural hazards. Based on long-term fieldwork, the book portrays the often creative and innovative ways in which slum dwellers cope with recurrent floods. The book shows that behaviour that is often described as irrational or ineffective by outside experts can be highly pragmatic and often effective. This book argues that human risk behaviour cannot be explained by the risk itself, but instead by seemingly unrelated factors such as trust in authorities and aid-institutions and unequal power structures. By considering a risk as a lens that exposes these factors, a completely new type of analysis is proposed that offers useful insights for everyone concerned about how people cope with the currently increasing amount of natural hazard. This is a valuable resource for academics, researchers and policy makers in the areas of risk studies, disaster and natural hazard, urban studies, anthropology, development, Southeast Asian studies and Indonesia studies.