ABSTRACT

A UN report recently found that the Asia Pacific is the world’s most disaster-prone region. Indeed, considering that the region accounts for more than half of the total number of disasters in the world, building capacity and resilience to mitigate the devastating impact of disasters is a pressing task for local actors.

This book takes a regional, multidisciplinary and multi-actor approach to improve understandings of how various actors respond to natural and human-induced disasters in the Asia-Pacific region. It examines the ideas and activities of four different categories of agents: civil society; military and state institutions; local cultural knowledge and the media; and economic initiatives, and these themes are approached from various academic disciplines, ranging from anthropology and cultural studies to economics, human geography and political science. The contributors draw their findings from a variety of countries in the region, including China, Fiji, India, Indonesia, Japan, Myanmar and Samoa, and importantly, focus on the interconnection between vulnerability and resilience. In turn, the book highlights how the nature and magnitude of disasters are influenced by social conditions, and aims to contribute to policies that prioritize development opportunities to enhance resilience. Further, it explores the complicated and multifaceted role of agency in building resilience, and presents a comparative framework for analysis and key findings from the Asia-Pacific region.

The focus of this book on recent and ongoing disasters makes it a topical and timely contribution to the growing field of disaster management, and as such it will appeal to students and scholars of environmental studies, development studies and Asian politics.

part |16 pages

Introduction

chapter 1|14 pages

Coping with disaster

Agency and resilience in the Asia-Pacific context

part I|50 pages

Civil society

chapter 2|16 pages

Responding to disasters in the Asia-Pacific region

State and civil society relationships

chapter 4|15 pages

Fostering civil society organizations for disaster relief in Japan

Challenges and prospects for sustainable future operations

part II|49 pages

Military and state institutions

chapter 5|17 pages

The military and disaster relief in China

Trends, drivers and implications

chapter 7|14 pages

Temporalities of planning and disaster

Slum demolition and the rebuilding of lives at the margins of Delhi

part III|52 pages

Local cultural knowledge and the media

chapter 9|15 pages

Coping with floods in urban Fiji

Responses and resilience of the poor

chapter 10|22 pages

From early warning system to trauma healing

Alternative media and disaster relief in Central Java

part IV|37 pages

Economic initiatives

chapter 11|18 pages

Agrarianism, capitalism or protectionism?

Exploring economic restructuring and local responses amidst global change in Samoa 1

chapter 12|17 pages

Responding to natural versus human-made disasters

Lessons from Fiji

part |10 pages

Conclusion