4.6 Article

Does climate change cause disasters? How citizens, academics, and leaders explain climate-related risk and disasters in Latin America and the Caribbean

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ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.ijdrr.2021.102173

Keywords

Climate change; Risk; Disasters; Vulnerability; Latin America; Caribbean

Funding

  1. Canada's International Development Research Centre (IDRC) [108501]
  2. Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada (SSHRC)
  3. Fonds de recherche du Quebec (FRQSC)

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This study examines how activists, academics, and governments in informal settlements in the Global South explain climate-related risks and disasters, highlighting significant mismatches between understandings of climate effects by residents and decision-makers. While some scholars view climate as a component of hazards, residents perceive it as a factor of vulnerability.
For decades, social scientists have attempted to reveal the real causes behind disasters. While some scholars have recently focused almost exclusively on people's vulnerabilities, the majority recognize that disasters result from a combination of people's choices and hazards. Agencies and government officials, on the other hand, have often downplayed the political component of disasters (particularly those linked to global warming), preferring to focus on the technical and managerial aspects of climate response. This study explores how activists in informal settlements, academics, and governments in the Global South explain climate-related risk and disasters. The study is based on interviews, workshops, and group meetings in Haiti, Cuba, Chile, and Colombia, and on a fouryear analysis of implementation activities where community leaders were given financial resources to create risk reduction initiatives. Results show that there are significant mismatches between understandings of climate effects by people in informal settlements and decision-makers. Besides, whereas some scholars tend to focus on an anthropocentric view of risk and consider climate a component of the hazard, residents perceive it as a factor of their vulnerability and a threat to their territories and ecosystems. These results challenge some popular definitions of climate risk and suggest that modern epistemologies of disasters are inappropriate to set up effective risk reduction in the Global South. Understanding local narratives of risk is crucial for the integration of climate and social agendas in the region.

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