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Indigenous Knowledge in Disaster Risk Reduction

Reyes, Joseph LU ; Ayo, Kiss Alexis ; Baluyan, Maria Paula and Balaguer, Alan Sam Ralei (2019) In The Copenhagen Journal of Asian Studies 37(1). p.103-132
Abstract
The importance of indigenous knowledge in reducing risk from disasters andnatural calamities has been widely discussed in the social sciences by scholarsarguing for integrative frameworks and participatory processes. This type ofknowledge is vital for archipelagic developing countries, such as the Philippines, situated in a geographical area exposed to natural hazards. However, despite itspotential contribution to disaster prevention, mitigation, response, rehabilitationand recovery, along with possible combination strategies with western scientificknowledge towards reducing vulnerability and disaster risk management, theliterature on the integration of specific communities' indigenous knowledgebaseddisaster preparedness and adaptation is... (More)
The importance of indigenous knowledge in reducing risk from disasters andnatural calamities has been widely discussed in the social sciences by scholarsarguing for integrative frameworks and participatory processes. This type ofknowledge is vital for archipelagic developing countries, such as the Philippines, situated in a geographical area exposed to natural hazards. However, despite itspotential contribution to disaster prevention, mitigation, response, rehabilitationand recovery, along with possible combination strategies with western scientificknowledge towards reducing vulnerability and disaster risk management, theliterature on the integration of specific communities' indigenous knowledgebaseddisaster preparedness and adaptation is still limited. The novel contributionof this article is in the discussion of the unique indigenous knowledgeidentified in the cases of San Miguel Island, Camotes Island and Alabat Island, which is utilized even up to the present. Particularly, this study identifies substantialaspects of indigenous knowledge that contribute to disaster risk reductionin the three selected cases. Findings reveal myriad indigenous knowledgepertaining to intensity, height, direction and movement of ocean waves; intensityof winds; sudden surfacing of deep-sea creatures and unease of animals; differentpatterns of clouds, darkening of skies and foggy horizons, among others. In closely examining indigenous knowledge, this study sheds new light byproviding meaningful insights for its contribution to disaster preparedness. (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
author
; ; and
organization
publishing date
type
Contribution to journal
publication status
published
subject
in
The Copenhagen Journal of Asian Studies
volume
37
issue
1
pages
29 pages
publisher
Copenhagen Business School
external identifiers
  • scopus:85085325737
ISSN
1395-4199
DOI
10.22439/cjas.v37i1.5908
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
49d2c45d-050f-463f-b95e-ea8bb99b9873
alternative location
https://rauli.cbs.dk/index.php/cjas/article/view/5908/6577
date added to LUP
2020-02-14 09:25:12
date last changed
2022-04-18 20:31:36
@article{49d2c45d-050f-463f-b95e-ea8bb99b9873,
  abstract     = {{The importance of indigenous knowledge in reducing risk from disasters andnatural calamities has been widely discussed in the social sciences by scholarsarguing for integrative frameworks and participatory processes. This type ofknowledge is vital for archipelagic developing countries, such as the Philippines, situated in a geographical area exposed to natural hazards. However, despite itspotential contribution to disaster prevention, mitigation, response, rehabilitationand recovery, along with possible combination strategies with western scientificknowledge towards reducing vulnerability and disaster risk management, theliterature on the integration of specific communities' indigenous knowledgebaseddisaster preparedness and adaptation is still limited. The novel contributionof this article is in the discussion of the unique indigenous knowledgeidentified in the cases of San Miguel Island, Camotes Island and Alabat Island, which is utilized even up to the present. Particularly, this study identifies substantialaspects of indigenous knowledge that contribute to disaster risk reductionin the three selected cases. Findings reveal myriad indigenous knowledgepertaining to intensity, height, direction and movement of ocean waves; intensityof winds; sudden surfacing of deep-sea creatures and unease of animals; differentpatterns of clouds, darkening of skies and foggy horizons, among others. In closely examining indigenous knowledge, this study sheds new light byproviding meaningful insights for its contribution to disaster preparedness.}},
  author       = {{Reyes, Joseph and Ayo, Kiss Alexis and Baluyan, Maria Paula and Balaguer, Alan Sam Ralei}},
  issn         = {{1395-4199}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  number       = {{1}},
  pages        = {{103--132}},
  publisher    = {{Copenhagen Business School}},
  series       = {{The Copenhagen Journal of Asian Studies}},
  title        = {{Indigenous Knowledge in Disaster Risk Reduction}},
  url          = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.22439/cjas.v37i1.5908}},
  doi          = {{10.22439/cjas.v37i1.5908}},
  volume       = {{37}},
  year         = {{2019}},
}