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Resisting El Niño : an investigation into coping strategies to flood-related disasters in the Rímac river basin, Peru

Jarman, Conrad LU (2020) MIDM19 20201
Department of Human Geography
LUMID International Master programme in applied International Development and Management
Abstract
Flood-related disasters pose one of the greatest contemporary challenges to development. Analysing and developing effective local coping strategies to flood-related disasters is crucial if at-risk communities are to successfully mitigate the impact of natural hazards whilst not compromising long-term development objectives.

This thesis utilises a combination of household surveys and key informant interviews to investigate the coping strategies taken by communities in the Rímac river basin in response to the 2017 El Niño Costero. This thesis then explores how the actions of the Peruvian state affected local coping capacities, and the repercussions of the coping actions implemented for future local development and disaster risk.

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Flood-related disasters pose one of the greatest contemporary challenges to development. Analysing and developing effective local coping strategies to flood-related disasters is crucial if at-risk communities are to successfully mitigate the impact of natural hazards whilst not compromising long-term development objectives.

This thesis utilises a combination of household surveys and key informant interviews to investigate the coping strategies taken by communities in the Rímac river basin in response to the 2017 El Niño Costero. This thesis then explores how the actions of the Peruvian state affected local coping capacities, and the repercussions of the coping actions implemented for future local development and disaster risk.

This thesis demonstrates that the low coping capacity of affected communities and an ineffective state response led to the widespread adoption of erosive coping strategies. The societal-wide lack of long-term vision and a desire to return to normalcy as quickly as possible resulted in coping strategies that were simply reactive and failed to address the underlying drivers of risk. As such, the coping strategies implemented following the 2017 disaster amplified disaster damages whilst simultaneously hindering the building of resilience and the long-term socio-economic development of affected communities. (Less)
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author
Jarman, Conrad LU
supervisor
organization
course
MIDM19 20201
year
type
H2 - Master's Degree (Two Years)
subject
keywords
Flood-related disasters, Disaster risk management, Disaster risk reduction, Coping strategies, Coping capacity, El Niño Costero
funder
Crafoord Foundation
language
English
id
9025814
date added to LUP
2020-09-08 12:05:02
date last changed
2020-09-08 12:05:02
@misc{9025814,
  abstract     = {{Flood-related disasters pose one of the greatest contemporary challenges to development. Analysing and developing effective local coping strategies to flood-related disasters is crucial if at-risk communities are to successfully mitigate the impact of natural hazards whilst not compromising long-term development objectives. 

This thesis utilises a combination of household surveys and key informant interviews to investigate the coping strategies taken by communities in the Rímac river basin in response to the 2017 El Niño Costero. This thesis then explores how the actions of the Peruvian state affected local coping capacities, and the repercussions of the coping actions implemented for future local development and disaster risk.

This thesis demonstrates that the low coping capacity of affected communities and an ineffective state response led to the widespread adoption of erosive coping strategies. The societal-wide lack of long-term vision and a desire to return to normalcy as quickly as possible resulted in coping strategies that were simply reactive and failed to address the underlying drivers of risk. As such, the coping strategies implemented following the 2017 disaster amplified disaster damages whilst simultaneously hindering the building of resilience and the long-term socio-economic development of affected communities.}},
  author       = {{Jarman, Conrad}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  note         = {{Student Paper}},
  title        = {{Resisting El Niño : an investigation into coping strategies to flood-related disasters in the Rímac river basin, Peru}},
  year         = {{2020}},
}