The Social and Political Context of Adjustment to Riverbank Erosion Hazard and Population Resettlement in Bangladesh
- 1 September 1989
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Taylor & Francis in Human Organization
- Vol. 48 (3) , 196-205
- https://doi.org/10.17730/humo.48.3.v55465j651259835
Abstract
This paper describes and explains human adjustments to riverbank erosion hazard in the Brahmaptura-Jamuna floodplain of Bangladesh. It critically reviews the dominant theoretical orientations found in the study of natural hazards. Both survey and in-depth anthropological data from Bangladesh villages are used to illustrate certain theoretical limitations of existing hazard studies for understanding social adjustment to hazard and socio-political dynamics of resettlement. The paper suggests that a unified approach integrating perceptual and behavioral variables with socio-political and structural factors is essential to a holistic understanding of the problem of adjustment. Such a perspective requires that human responses be viewed in a broad historical and political-economic context, since options for adjustment are largely products of existing social structure.Keywords
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