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A case study of coping strategies and landslides in two villages of Central-Eastern Nepal

Landslides are an increasing problem in Nepal’s Middle Hills due to both natural and human phenomena: mainly increasingly intense monsoon rains and a boom in rural road construction. This problem has largely been neglected due to underreporting of losses and the dispersed nature of landslides. Under...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Applied geography (Sevenoaks) 2012-03, Vol.32 (2), p.680-690
Main Authors: Sudmeier-Rieux, Karen, Jaquet, Stephanie, Derron, Marc-Henri, Jaboyedoff, Michel, Devkota, Sanjaya
Format: Article
Language:English
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Summary:Landslides are an increasing problem in Nepal’s Middle Hills due to both natural and human phenomena: mainly increasingly intense monsoon rains and a boom in rural road construction. This problem has largely been neglected due to underreporting of losses and the dispersed nature of landslides. Understanding how populations cope with landslides is a first step toward developing more effective landslide risk management programs. The present research focuses on two villages in Central-Eastern Nepal, both affected by active landslides but with different coping strategies. Research methods are interdisciplinary, based on a geological assessment of landslide risk and a socio-economic study of the villages using household questionnaires, focus group discussions and transect walks. Community risk maps are compared with geological landslide risk maps to better understand and communicate community risk perceptions, priorities and coping strategies. A modified typology of coping strategies is presented, based on previous work by Burton, Kates, and White (1993) that is useful for decision-makers for designing more effective programs for landslide mitigation. Main findings underscore that coping strategies, mainly seeking external assistance and outmigration, are closely linked to access to resources, ethnicity/social status and levels of community organization. Conclusions include the importance of investing in organizational skills, while building on local knowledge about landslide mitigation for reducing landslide risk. There is great potential to increase coping strategies by incorporating skills training on landslide mitigation in existing agricultural outreach and community forest user group training. ► Two landslide-affected villages are studied in Nepal’s Middle Hills. ► The villages have similar landslide risk but different economic and social status. ► Coping strategies differ due to differing social status of each village. ► Landslide awareness is high but food security is the first priority. ► Reducing landslide risk also requires addressing food security.
ISSN:0143-6228
1873-7730
DOI:10.1016/j.apgeog.2011.07.005