Introduction Susanna Price Part I: Escalating displacements: convergences, rationales and the sea... more Introduction Susanna Price Part I: Escalating displacements: convergences, rationales and the search for alternatives 1. How climate extremes are affecting the movement of populations in the Asia Pacific region Francois Gemenne, Julia Blocher, Florence de Longueville, Nathalie Perrin, Sara Vigil, Caroline Zickgraf and Pierre Ozer 2. Multiplying displacement impacts: development as usual in a changing global climate Kate Hoshour 3. Displacement and resettlement as a mode of capitalist transformation: evidence from China Brooke Wilmsen and Michael Webber 4. 'Something old, something new, something borrowed, something blue': a critical evaluation of the newest Indian Land Acquisition, Resettlement and Rehabilitation Act (2013) Chiara Mariotti Part II: Pressures on land: global issues, country strategies and local responses 5. From Banaba to Rabi: a Pacific model for resettlement? John Connell and Gil Marvel Tabucanon 6. India's grassroots movements against investment-forced displacement Felix Padel 7. Local responses to land grabbing and displacement in rural Cambodia Andreas Neef and Siphat Touch 8. Resettlement and borderlands: adapting to planned population resettlement on the Cambodian-Thai border Jessie Connell 9. Community strategies for accountability in displacement: the experience of communities in Boeung Kak Lake, Cambodia Adam McBeth 10. Development-forced land grabs and resistance in reforming Myanmar: the Letpadaung Copper Mine Emel Zerrouk Part III: Environment, climate change and disasters 11. Disaster prevention resettlement programme in western China as an adaptation to climate change Yinru Lei, Max Finlayson, Rik Thwaites and Guoqing Shi 12. Conservation-led displacement, poverty and cultural survival: the experiences of the indigenous Rana Tharus community in far-western Nepal Lai Ming Lam 13. Pondering the right to return... and the right not to: Fukushima evacuees in limbo Jane Singer and Winifred Bird 14. Negotiating relocation in a weak state: land tenure and adaptation to sea-level rise in Solomon Islands Rebecca Monson and Daniel Fitzpatrick 15. Land for housing: international standards and resettlement in tsunami-affected Indonesia Daniel Fitzpatrick Conclusion Jane Singer and Susanna Price
Dans le moyen Niger, les inondations sont de plus en plus frequentes et dramatiques. Ces derniere... more Dans le moyen Niger, les inondations sont de plus en plus frequentes et dramatiques. Ces dernieres annees, les principales villes riveraines du fleuve Niger ont connu des inondations historiques, avec d’importants degâts materiels et humains. Parmi les facteurs mis en cause figurent les changements d’usage des sols ayant entraine la modification des etats de surface et l’augmentation du ruissellement. A ceux-la s’ajoute l’evolution du regime pluviometrique. Cet article propose une analyse des precipitations de la region sur la periode 1950-2013. Les indices pluviometriques, calcules a travers l’application RClimdex ont permis de mettre en evidence l’evolution des caracteristiques et les tendances pluviometriques qui sont a l’origine de l’aggravation des inondations dans ces localites.
International Journal of Asian Social Science, Mar 15, 2012
Abstract:[en] This paper describes the use of satellite imageries and GIS data for identifying ke... more Abstract:[en] This paper describes the use of satellite imageries and GIS data for identifying key environmental characteristics of Binh Thuan Province in south central Vietnam and for detecting the major changes patterns within this region. Landsat TM (1990) and Landsat ETM+(2002) imageries were used to classify the study area into seven land use and land cover (LULC) classes. A post-classification comparison analysis was used to quantify and illustrate the various LULC conversions that took place over the 12-year span of time. ...
Southwestern Mauritania is located in a semi-arid environment exposed to large rainfall variation... more Southwestern Mauritania is located in a semi-arid environment exposed to large rainfall variations and affected by a severe drought since the mid-1960s. The studied area includes the right bank of the Senegal River and the southern extension of the Saharan sandy dunes and is based on the analysis of climatic data, field studies, and four aerial surveys realized since 1954. The climatic analysis shows that, after a strong decline of yearly rainfall started in the mid-1960s, a significant increase is observed from the early 1990s. In the meantime, dust storms frequency has dramatically increased while the threshold wind speed declined as a result of vegetation contraction. The comparison of the four mosaics of aerial photos reveals the major impact of both drought and human on recent environment changes with the strong decline of the forest, the reactivation of sandy soils and the apparition of large rice fields. If the increase of active dunes activity is likely to be a consequence of the persisting drought, forest decline is more likely to be attributed to fuel wood collection in a first time, then to the creation of rice fields since the late 1980s. Although the 2003 aerial photos show a timid return of vegetation in very limited and specific areas, field surveys show that wind erosion is still very important and water erosion is developing very rapidly because of the absence of vegetation cover.
Introduction Susanna Price Part I: Escalating displacements: convergences, rationales and the sea... more Introduction Susanna Price Part I: Escalating displacements: convergences, rationales and the search for alternatives 1. How climate extremes are affecting the movement of populations in the Asia Pacific region Francois Gemenne, Julia Blocher, Florence de Longueville, Nathalie Perrin, Sara Vigil, Caroline Zickgraf and Pierre Ozer 2. Multiplying displacement impacts: development as usual in a changing global climate Kate Hoshour 3. Displacement and resettlement as a mode of capitalist transformation: evidence from China Brooke Wilmsen and Michael Webber 4. 'Something old, something new, something borrowed, something blue': a critical evaluation of the newest Indian Land Acquisition, Resettlement and Rehabilitation Act (2013) Chiara Mariotti Part II: Pressures on land: global issues, country strategies and local responses 5. From Banaba to Rabi: a Pacific model for resettlement? John Connell and Gil Marvel Tabucanon 6. India's grassroots movements against investment-forced displacement Felix Padel 7. Local responses to land grabbing and displacement in rural Cambodia Andreas Neef and Siphat Touch 8. Resettlement and borderlands: adapting to planned population resettlement on the Cambodian-Thai border Jessie Connell 9. Community strategies for accountability in displacement: the experience of communities in Boeung Kak Lake, Cambodia Adam McBeth 10. Development-forced land grabs and resistance in reforming Myanmar: the Letpadaung Copper Mine Emel Zerrouk Part III: Environment, climate change and disasters 11. Disaster prevention resettlement programme in western China as an adaptation to climate change Yinru Lei, Max Finlayson, Rik Thwaites and Guoqing Shi 12. Conservation-led displacement, poverty and cultural survival: the experiences of the indigenous Rana Tharus community in far-western Nepal Lai Ming Lam 13. Pondering the right to return... and the right not to: Fukushima evacuees in limbo Jane Singer and Winifred Bird 14. Negotiating relocation in a weak state: land tenure and adaptation to sea-level rise in Solomon Islands Rebecca Monson and Daniel Fitzpatrick 15. Land for housing: international standards and resettlement in tsunami-affected Indonesia Daniel Fitzpatrick Conclusion Jane Singer and Susanna Price
Dans le moyen Niger, les inondations sont de plus en plus frequentes et dramatiques. Ces derniere... more Dans le moyen Niger, les inondations sont de plus en plus frequentes et dramatiques. Ces dernieres annees, les principales villes riveraines du fleuve Niger ont connu des inondations historiques, avec d’importants degâts materiels et humains. Parmi les facteurs mis en cause figurent les changements d’usage des sols ayant entraine la modification des etats de surface et l’augmentation du ruissellement. A ceux-la s’ajoute l’evolution du regime pluviometrique. Cet article propose une analyse des precipitations de la region sur la periode 1950-2013. Les indices pluviometriques, calcules a travers l’application RClimdex ont permis de mettre en evidence l’evolution des caracteristiques et les tendances pluviometriques qui sont a l’origine de l’aggravation des inondations dans ces localites.
International Journal of Asian Social Science, Mar 15, 2012
Abstract:[en] This paper describes the use of satellite imageries and GIS data for identifying ke... more Abstract:[en] This paper describes the use of satellite imageries and GIS data for identifying key environmental characteristics of Binh Thuan Province in south central Vietnam and for detecting the major changes patterns within this region. Landsat TM (1990) and Landsat ETM+(2002) imageries were used to classify the study area into seven land use and land cover (LULC) classes. A post-classification comparison analysis was used to quantify and illustrate the various LULC conversions that took place over the 12-year span of time. ...
Southwestern Mauritania is located in a semi-arid environment exposed to large rainfall variation... more Southwestern Mauritania is located in a semi-arid environment exposed to large rainfall variations and affected by a severe drought since the mid-1960s. The studied area includes the right bank of the Senegal River and the southern extension of the Saharan sandy dunes and is based on the analysis of climatic data, field studies, and four aerial surveys realized since 1954. The climatic analysis shows that, after a strong decline of yearly rainfall started in the mid-1960s, a significant increase is observed from the early 1990s. In the meantime, dust storms frequency has dramatically increased while the threshold wind speed declined as a result of vegetation contraction. The comparison of the four mosaics of aerial photos reveals the major impact of both drought and human on recent environment changes with the strong decline of the forest, the reactivation of sandy soils and the apparition of large rice fields. If the increase of active dunes activity is likely to be a consequence of the persisting drought, forest decline is more likely to be attributed to fuel wood collection in a first time, then to the creation of rice fields since the late 1980s. Although the 2003 aerial photos show a timid return of vegetation in very limited and specific areas, field surveys show that wind erosion is still very important and water erosion is developing very rapidly because of the absence of vegetation cover.
Uploads
Papers