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Journal Article

Citation

Van Klinken G. Disaster Prev. Manage. 2021; 30(1): 35-46.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2021, Emerald Group Publishing)

DOI

10.1108/DPM-01-2020-0027

PMID

unavailable

Abstract

PURPOSE This paper focuses on the adaptations societies make to climate-related disasters. How they learnt from them in the past should indicate how they will respond in the more climate-stressed future. National typhoon disaster politics arise when citizens demand disaster protection from their state.

DESIGN/METHODOLOGY/APPROACH The paper analyzes one episode of typhoon politics in each of three Asian countries before 1945: the Philippines (1928), India (1942) and Japan (1934). These three countries show high variance in state capacity and level of democracy. Discourse data are found in contemporary newspaper accounts.

FINDINGS In each case, the typhoon disaster politics were shaped by the "distance" (geographical, institutional, class and cultural) between citizen-victims and the state. Where that distance was great (rural Philippines, Bengal-India), the state tended to minimise victimhood. Where it was small (urban Japan), adaptation was serious and rapid. Social implications The findings should stimulate public discussion of the way in which past social relations and power dynamics surrounding climate-related disasters might influence the present. As the political character of climate change adaptation grows clearer, so does the need for debate to be well-informed.

ORIGINALITY/VALUE Most historical work on climate-related disasters has focused either on the natural phenomena, or on their societal impact. The present paper's focus on adaptation is part of a small but growing scholarly effort to bend the debate towards the evolution of adaptive capacity.


Language: en

Keywords

Adaptation; Bengal; Class; Cyclones; Democracy; Disasters; Japan; Philippines; Politics; Rural; Typhoons; Urban

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