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El. knyga: Living with Floods in a Mobile Southeast Asia: A Political Ecology of Vulnerability, Migration and Environmental Change

Edited by (Chulalongkorn University, Thailand), Edited by (Chulalongkorn University, Thailand), Edited by (University of Brighton, UK)

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This book contributes to a better understanding of the relationship between migration, vulnerability, resilience and social justice associated with flooding across diverse environmental, social and policy contexts in Southeast Asia. It challenges simple analyses of flooding as a singular driver of migration, and instead considers the ways in which floods figure in migration-based livelihoods and amongst already mobile populations.

The book develops a conceptual framework based on a mobile political ecology in which particular attention is paid to the multidimensionality, temporalities and geographies of vulnerability. Rather than simply emphasising the capacities (or lack thereof) of individuals and households, the focus is on identifying factors that instigate, manage and perpetuate vulnerable populations and places: these include the sociopolitical dynamics of floods, flood hazards and risky environments, migration and migrant-based livelihoods and the policy environments through which all of these take shape.

The book is organised around a series of eight empirical urban and rural case studies from countries in Southeast Asia, where lives are marked by mobility and by floods associated with the regions monsoonal climate. The concluding chapter synthesises the insights of the case studies, and suggests future policy directions. Together, the chapters highlight critical policy questions around the governance of migration, institutionalised disaster response strategies and broader development agendas.
List of acronyms
vii
Author biographies ix
Acknowledgements xiii
1 Migration and floods in Southeast Asia: a mobile political ecology of vulnerability, resilience and social justice
1(21)
Rebecca Elmhirst
Carl Middleton
Bernadette P. Resurreccion
2 Living with the flood: a political ecology of fishing, farming, and migration around Tonle Sap Lake, Cambodia
22(20)
Carl Middleton
Borin Un
3 Migrants seeking out and living with floods: a case study of Mingalar Kwet Thet settlement, Yangon, Myanmar
42(21)
Maxime Boutry
4 Risky spaces, vulnerable households, and mobile lives in Laos: Quo vadis flooding and migration?
63(26)
Albert Salamanca
Outhai Soukkhy
Joshua Rigg
Jacqueline Ernerot
5 Living with and against floods in Bangkok and Thailand's central plain
89(16)
Naruemon Thabchumpon
Narumon Arunotai
6 Generating vulnerability to floods: poor urban migrants and the state in Metro Manila, Philippines
105(22)
Edsel E. Sajor
Bernadette P. Resurreccion
Sharon Feliza ann P. Macagba
7 Responses to flooding: Migrants' perspectives in Hanoi, Vietnam
127(19)
Nguyen Tuan Anh
Pham Quang Minh
8 Flooding in a city of migrants: ethnicity and entitlement in Bandar Lampung, Indonesia
146(21)
Rebecca Elmhirst
Ari Darmastuti
9 Vulnerabilities of local people and migrants due to flooding in Malaysia: identifying gaps for better management
167(21)
Mohammad Imam Hasan Reza
Er Ah Choy
Joy Jacqueline Pereira
10 Floods and migrants: synthesis and implications for policy
188(10)
Louis Lebel
Supang Chantavanich
Werasit Sittitrai
Index 198
Carl Middleton is Assistant Professor and Director of the Center for Social Development Studies in the Faculty of Political Science, Chulalongkorn University, Thailand.

Rebecca Elmhirst is Reader in Human Geography and Deputy Head of the School of Environment and Technology at the University of Brighton, UK.

Supang Chantavanich is Professor Emeritus at the Faculty of Political Science, Institute of Asian Studies, and adviser to the Asian Research Center for Migration, Chulalongkorn University, Thailand.