生活在水和陆地上

Gabriela P. Vildosola
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引用次数: 0

摘要

洛雷托是秘鲁最大的亚马逊地区,拥有20多万居民,他们生活在传统的河边农村社区,适应了水陆两栖的生活方式。洪水泛滥时,房屋会在河上升起或漂浮,在缺水时,房屋会停在干涸的河床上。然而,这些水陆两栖社区并不只存在于农村地区。伊基托斯是洛雷托最大的城市,被冲积平原所环绕,有超过9万人生活在水上,为该地区带来了丰富的社会、文化和环境活力。然而,这些社区的基础设施条件差,资源有限,影响了生态系统和人口健康。这项定性研究的目的是了解这些两栖社区生活的物质、社会文化和环境条件,并确定阻碍其健康城市发展的政治、法律和文化障碍。数据收集通过半结构化访谈、调查和观察物理和环境条件进行。结果表明,在这些非正式社区的正规化过程中存在冲突,从行政和法律方面到可居住领土的有限定义。我们确定了这些社区当前城市建筑条件的好处,其住房类型适应河流的季节性变化,可能提供另一种模式来适应气候变化和海平面上升的影响。我们还发现了在卫生、可达性、公共空间和加强社区网络方面的挑战,以及政府应对方面的挑战,政府提出的两栖社区搬迁建议没有充分考虑到这些社区的经济、社会和文化价值。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Living on water and land
Loreto, the largest Amazonian region in Peru, is home to more than 200,000  inhabitants that live in traditional riverside rural communities adapted to an amphibious lifestyle, with houses that rise or float on the river in times of flooding and perch on the dried riverbed in low water times. Nevertheless, these amphibious communities are not exclusive to rural areas. Iquitos, the largest city of Loreto, is surrounded by alluvial plains, where more than 90,000 people live on the water and bring a rich social, cultural, and environmental vibrancy to the regions. However, poor infrastructure conditions and limited resources in this communities affect the ecosystem and the population's health. The objective of this qualitative study was to understand the physical, sociocultural, and environmental conditions in which these amphibious communities live and identify the political, legal, and cultural barriers that prevent their healthy urban development. Data collection was conducted through semi-structured interviews, surveys, and observation of physical and environmental conditions. The results suggest conflicts in the formalization processes of theses informal communities, from administrative and legal aspects to a limited definition of habitable territory. We identified the benefits of the current urban-architectural conditions of these communities, whose housing typologies, adapted to the seasonal change of the rivers, may provide a alternative model to adapt with resilience to the impacts of climate change and sea level rise. We also identified challenges in sanitation, accessibility, public space, and strengthe of community networks, as well as challenges in the response of the government whose proposals for relocation of the amphibious communities have not fully considered these communities' economic, social, and cultural values.
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