Rethinking risk and disasters in mountain areas

This chapter presents a view of risk and disaster in the mountains that finds them fully a part of public safety issues in modern states and developments, rather than separated from them. This contrasts with prevailing approaches to disaster focused on natural hazards, “unscheduled” or extreme event...

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Main Authors: Kenneth Hewitt, Manjari Mehta
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Institut de Géographie Alpine 2012-05-01
Series:Revue de Géographie Alpine
Online Access:https://journals.openedition.org/rga/1653
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author Kenneth Hewitt
Manjari Mehta
author_facet Kenneth Hewitt
Manjari Mehta
author_sort Kenneth Hewitt
collection DOAJ
description This chapter presents a view of risk and disaster in the mountains that finds them fully a part of public safety issues in modern states and developments, rather than separated from them. This contrasts with prevailing approaches to disaster focused on natural hazards, “unscheduled” or extreme events, and emergency preparedness; approaches strongly reinforced by mountain stereotypes. Rather, we find the legacies of social and economic histories, especially relations to down-country or metropolitan actors, are decisive in shaping contemporary “mountain realities”. Developments in transportation, resource extraction and tourism that serve state and international agendas can increase rather than reduce risks for mountain populations, and undermine pre-existing strategies to minimise environmental dangers. Above all, we see rapid urbanisation in mountains generally and the Himalaya in particular as highly implicated in exacerbating risks and creating new types of vulnerabilities. Enforced displacement, and concentration of people in urban agglomerations, is a major part of the modern history of mountain lands that invites more careful exploration. Rapid expansion of built environments and infrastructure, without due regard to hazards and structural safety, introduce new and complex risks, while altering older equations with and to the land and sapping people’s resilience. In the lives of mountain people, environmental hazards are mostly subordinate to other, societal sources of risk and vulnerability, and to the insecurities these involve. Basically we conclude that “marginalisation” of mountain lands is primarily an outcome of socio-economic developments in which their condition is subordinated to strategic planning by state, metropolitan and global actors.
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spelling doaj-art-518700a68eed421ba7a92c5f09fb29702025-01-10T15:54:29ZengInstitut de Géographie AlpineRevue de Géographie Alpine0035-11211760-74262012-05-01100110.4000/rga.1653Rethinking risk and disasters in mountain areasKenneth HewittManjari MehtaThis chapter presents a view of risk and disaster in the mountains that finds them fully a part of public safety issues in modern states and developments, rather than separated from them. This contrasts with prevailing approaches to disaster focused on natural hazards, “unscheduled” or extreme events, and emergency preparedness; approaches strongly reinforced by mountain stereotypes. Rather, we find the legacies of social and economic histories, especially relations to down-country or metropolitan actors, are decisive in shaping contemporary “mountain realities”. Developments in transportation, resource extraction and tourism that serve state and international agendas can increase rather than reduce risks for mountain populations, and undermine pre-existing strategies to minimise environmental dangers. Above all, we see rapid urbanisation in mountains generally and the Himalaya in particular as highly implicated in exacerbating risks and creating new types of vulnerabilities. Enforced displacement, and concentration of people in urban agglomerations, is a major part of the modern history of mountain lands that invites more careful exploration. Rapid expansion of built environments and infrastructure, without due regard to hazards and structural safety, introduce new and complex risks, while altering older equations with and to the land and sapping people’s resilience. In the lives of mountain people, environmental hazards are mostly subordinate to other, societal sources of risk and vulnerability, and to the insecurities these involve. Basically we conclude that “marginalisation” of mountain lands is primarily an outcome of socio-economic developments in which their condition is subordinated to strategic planning by state, metropolitan and global actors.https://journals.openedition.org/rga/1653
spellingShingle Kenneth Hewitt
Manjari Mehta
Rethinking risk and disasters in mountain areas
Revue de Géographie Alpine
title Rethinking risk and disasters in mountain areas
title_full Rethinking risk and disasters in mountain areas
title_fullStr Rethinking risk and disasters in mountain areas
title_full_unstemmed Rethinking risk and disasters in mountain areas
title_short Rethinking risk and disasters in mountain areas
title_sort rethinking risk and disasters in mountain areas
url https://journals.openedition.org/rga/1653
work_keys_str_mv AT kennethhewitt rethinkingriskanddisastersinmountainareas
AT manjarimehta rethinkingriskanddisastersinmountainareas