mt merapi volcano draft2

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Page 1: Mt Merapi Volcano Draft2
Page 2: Mt Merapi Volcano Draft2
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Question:

▼ How does culture contribute to people’s vulnerability and capacity?

▼ What can be learned from the way local communities help each other in times of disaster?

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Presentation Outline▼ Introduction ▼ Evacuation behaviour - perceptions of risk▼ Framing of calamity - ownership of disaster▼ Conclusion

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IntroductionMt. Merapi eruption 2010:▼ 2 provinces and 4 districts affected▼ 309 died▼ 396,407 evacuated▼ 716 evacuation “shelters”

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Evacuation Behaviour & Perception of Risk

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Perception of risk

“People calculate risks...in various cultural and individual ways...people construct their vulnerability, including at times the denial of it.”

Oliver-Smith, Anthony and M. Hoffman, Susannah. 1999. The Angry Earth: Disaster in Anthropological Perspective. London: Routledge

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City and the mountain

Image source: www.jogjapedia.com (from the book “Keraton Jogja”)

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How do people perceive the mountain?

▼ Mountain as a living being

▼ Eruption is an acceptable risk

▼ Cattle = lifetime saving

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Lack in disaster preparedness

• Evacuation shelter built within 10 km zone

• Ad-hoc decicions in using public spaces for evacuation

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Page 14: Mt Merapi Volcano Draft2

Framing of Calamity

• Mediacreates new myths by blaming “myth” victimhood

• Presence of the state

• State VS common people

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Video: TV reporthttp://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eDH1spDiedk&feature=related

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Ownership of Disaster

Holopis Kuntul Baris

▼ People opened their doors for evacuees

▼ Wrapped rice movement

▼ Digital natives (Prensky, 2003)built from informal interactionsthe stranger factor

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Conclusions:• Local value perceptions of risk must be understood and

utilized for public education • Preemptive planning: evacuation shelter, warning information

flow

• Local coping strategy: safe residential areas as alternative

• Engage community radios, social media groups for information-sharing and mobilizing resources in emergencies

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“The crucial point in understanding why disasters happen is that...they are also the product of social, political and economical environments.”

Wisner, Blaikie, Canon and Davis. 1994. “At Risk: natural hazards, people’s vulnerability and disasters” London: Routledge.

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Anthropological approach to disaster:

“Cultural systems (the beliefs, behaviors, and institutions characteristic of a particular society or group) figure at the center of that society’s disaster vulnerability, preparedness, mobilization, and prevention.” Henry, D Anthropological Contributions to the Study of Disasters. In Disciplines, Disasters and Emergency Management: The Convergence and Divergence of Concepts, Issues and Trends From the Research Literature . D. McEntire and W. Blanchard, eds. Emittsburg, Maryland: Federal Emergency Management Agency.

http://training.fema.gov/emiweb/edu/ddemtextbook.asp

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Evacuation Behaviour• Centralized evacuation shelters VS “sporadic”

evacuation to residential areas

Preemptive Planning (Miho Mazareeuw)• Not to rely on singular measure of defense • “You can’t prevent things by management and

engineering... people need to know where to evacuate, and it has to be a community-based effort.”

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Preemptive planning based on local people’s coping strategy could have improved the disaster response

Define public spaces as evacuation shelter Safe residential areas as alternative