TY - JOUR PY - 2019// TI - Indigenous mountain people's risk perception to environmental hazards in border conflict areas JO - International journal of disaster risk reduction A1 - Ahmed, Bayes A1 - Sammonds, Peter A1 - Saville, Naomi M. A1 - Le Masson, Virginie A1 - Suri, Kavita A1 - Bhat, Ghulam M. A1 - Hakhoo, Naveen A1 - Jolden, Tsering A1 - Hussain, Gulzar A1 - Wangmo, Kuenga A1 - Thusu, Bindra SP - e101063 EP - e101063 VL - 35 IS - N2 - This study aims to understand community risk perception to environmental hazards in a border conflict zone context in high-mountain areas. Participatory rural appraisal (PRA) tools were applied by the social science team. The results were validated with a hazard map prepared by a separate team comprised of geologists. Turtuk, the northernmost village in Ladakh, India located near the line of control with Pakistan was undertaken as a case study. Turtuk represents a high mountain indigenous rural community which has experienced several catastrophic disasters (flash flooding and landslides in 2010, 2014, and 2015) and territorial armed conflicts (wars in 1971 and 1999 with Pakistan) in recent times. The villagers were able to identify various environmental hazards and associated risk zones through participatory timeline diagram, and hazard and dream mapping exercises. The PRA maps matched the geological hazard map of Turtuk, demonstrating that community people are highly aware of surrounding hazards regardless of differences in age, sex, education, occupation, and religion. They apply indigenous knowledge to deal with the adverse climate and calamities. The technique, of analysing community vulnerability in the context of conflict and disasters by applying qualitative PRA tools and validating the mapping results, as piloted in this study is novel and replicable in any disaster setting.

Language: en

LA - en SN - 2212-4209 UR - http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ijdrr.2019.01.002 ID - ref1 ER -