Disaster Archipelago: Locating Vulnerability and Resilience in the Philippines

Author:   Maria Carinnes P. Alejandria ,  Will Smith ,  Mark Anthony Alindogan ,  Arlen A. Ancheta
Publisher:   Lexington Books
ISBN:  

9781498569958


Pages:   306
Publication Date:   05 April 2023
Format:   Paperback
Availability:   Out of stock   Availability explained
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Disaster Archipelago: Locating Vulnerability and Resilience in the Philippines


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Author:   Maria Carinnes P. Alejandria ,  Will Smith ,  Mark Anthony Alindogan ,  Arlen A. Ancheta
Publisher:   Lexington Books
Imprint:   Lexington Books
Dimensions:   Width: 15.40cm , Height: 1.80cm , Length: 22.30cm
Weight:   0.490kg
ISBN:  

9781498569958


ISBN 10:   1498569951
Pages:   306
Publication Date:   05 April 2023
Audience:   Professional and scholarly ,  Professional & Vocational
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   Out of stock   Availability explained
The supplier is temporarily out of stock of this item. It will be ordered for you on backorder and shipped when it becomes available.

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The Philippines is one of the most disaster-prone countries in the world, and this edited collection brings together several anthropological studies examining disaster management in the island nation. Each chapter is a separate study focusing on a different disaster management issue or on a community or population that was devastated by disasters such as typhoons or earthquakes. The studies investigate disaster coping strategies, including humanitarian intervention, protection of vulnerable populations, post-disaster accountability, disaster resilience, insecurity and inequality of livelihood supplies, community-engaged aid programs, and implementation and evaluation of aid programs, among others. Chapters also examine social and cultural factors that impact and are impacted by coping strategies, such as local and federal governance, political-economic constraints, disaster preparedness by communities and the government, and the role of sociocultural traditions in coping with disasters. Importantly, disasters are not only viewed as natural phenomena but also as social justice issues. Overall, the anthropologists and scholars who contribute to this volume provide a panoramic view of disaster management in the Philippines as well as useful insights for global disaster studies. Summing Up: Recommended. Upper-division undergraduates through faculty; professionals. * Choice Reviews * Disaster Archipelago: Locating Vulnerability and Resilience in the Philippines provides a rich diversity of perspectives and lived experiences of disaster in the Philippines. The accounts in this volume are deeply rooted in the multifaceted impacts of colonialism in the Philippines—physical, historical, political, economic, and social—and the subsequent ways this history has been experienced by a diversity of communities across the country. This book offers an accessible and important exploration into the diverse ways in which communities grapple with disaster. -- Vincenzo Bollettino, Harvard University In this collection, Maria Carinnes P. Alejandria and Will Smith demonstrate that all humanitarian emergencies, regardless of their proximal causes, are culturally constructed. By grounding the experience of disaster in the Philippines in the lives of a diverse range of communities, the contributors clarify the various forces—social, economic, political, cultural, demographic, and public health—that shape the complex interactions between natural hazards on the one hand and the two-sided coin of human vulnerability and resilience on the other. A natural hazard may toss that coin, but humans have always determined what is engraved on either side, and, therefore, the potential outcomes of the coin toss. -- Adam C. Levine, Brown University Critically reframing reified and essentialized notions of disaster in the Philippines, this edited volume offers a fresh interdisciplinary perspective on the scaled challenges of comprehending, responding to, and overcoming the discursive and material manifestations of disaster across the archipelago. From locally situated ethnographic study to critical policy–practice analysis, Disaster Archipelago: Locating Vulnerability and Resilience in the Philippines offers us a diverse and exciting range of critical scholarship that successfully reframes long-standing understandings and responses to disasters. -- Wolfram Dressler, University of Melbourne


The Philippines is one of the most disaster-prone countries in the world, and this edited collection brings together several anthropological studies examining disaster management in the island nation. Each chapter is a separate study focusing on a different disaster management issue or on a community or population that was devastated by disasters such as typhoons or earthquakes. The studies investigate disaster coping strategies, including humanitarian intervention, protection of vulnerable populations, post-disaster accountability, disaster resilience, insecurity and inequality of livelihood supplies, community-engaged aid programs, and implementation and evaluation of aid programs, among others. Chapters also examine social and cultural factors that impact and are impacted by coping strategies, such as local and federal governance, political-economic constraints, disaster preparedness by communities and the government, and the role of sociocultural traditions in coping with disasters. Importantly, disasters are not only viewed as natural phenomena but also as social justice issues. Overall, the anthropologists and scholars who contribute to this volume provide a panoramic view of disaster management in the Philippines as well as useful insights for global disaster studies. Summing Up: Recommended. Upper-division undergraduates through faculty; professionals. * Choice Reviews * Disaster Archipelago: Locating Vulnerability and Resilience in the Philippines provides a rich diversity of perspectives and lived experiences of disaster in the Philippines. The accounts in this volume are deeply rooted in the multifaceted impacts of colonialism in the Philippines-physical, historical, political, economic, and social-and the subsequent ways this history has been experienced by a diversity of communities across the country. This book offers an accessible and important exploration into the diverse ways in which communities grapple with disaster. -- Vincenzo Bollettino, Harvard University In this collection, Maria Carinnes P. Alejandria and Will Smith demonstrate that all humanitarian emergencies, regardless of their proximal causes, are culturally constructed. By grounding the experience of disaster in the Philippines in the lives of a diverse range of communities, the contributors clarify the various forces-social, economic, political, cultural, demographic, and public health-that shape the complex interactions between natural hazards on the one hand and the two-sided coin of human vulnerability and resilience on the other. A natural hazard may toss that coin, but humans have always determined what is engraved on either side, and, therefore, the potential outcomes of the coin toss. -- Adam C. Levine, Brown University Critically reframing reified and essentialized notions of disaster in the Philippines, this edited volume offers a fresh interdisciplinary perspective on the scaled challenges of comprehending, responding to, and overcoming the discursive and material manifestations of disaster across the archipelago. From locally situated ethnographic study to critical policy-practice analysis, Disaster Archipelago: Locating Vulnerability and Resilience in the Philippines offers us a diverse and exciting range of critical scholarship that successfully reframes long-standing understandings and responses to disasters. -- Wolfram Dressler, University of Melbourne


Author Information

Maria Carinnes P. Alejandria is assistant professor in the Department of Sociology at the University of Santo Tomas. Will Smith is associate research fellow at Deakin University.

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