为什么海啸灾民会返回海岸

IF 0.7 Q3 SOCIOLOGY
Kyoko Ueda, H. Torigoe
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引用次数: 18

摘要

本文的目的是澄清为什么人们不断生活在一个特定的自然灾害发生频率明显的地方。即使在巨大规模的自然灾害发生后,一些受害者试图留下来或后来返回“家园”,同时冒着遭受进一步灾难的风险。为什么人们选择住在容易发生自然灾害的地方,而不是远离海岸线的地方?特别是那些刚刚经历过海啸的人;是什么促使他们决定回到海边?正如对一个渔村社区的案例研究所表明的那样,人们知道,海岸附近的生活不可避免地与海洋的严酷和肥沃交织在一起。换句话说,人们所知道的是,他们不能有一个没有另一个。海的两边都制约着人们的生活,这就是他们所适应的。由于他们靠近大海,他们享有的丰饶和作为沿海社区的脆弱性对他们来说是不可分割的。当海啸来袭时,他们不知道如何拯救社区的所有成员、他们的家园和他们的船只。然而,他们确实知道他们应该如何适应沿海社区固有的不稳定性,以及他们应该如何重振社区。只有在了解了他们需要适应当地环境的方式之后,这个过程才会展开。作为一个沿海社区,他们已经准备好接受他们的脆弱性,甚至在海啸破坏之后,因为这是他们的祖先在历史上所做的那样享受海洋肥沃的条件。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Why do Victims of the Tsunami Return to the Coast
The purpose of this paper is to clarify why people continuously live in places where a specific natural disaster comes with apparent frequency. Even after a natural disaster of tremendous scale occurs, some victims attempt to remain or later return “home” while inviting the risk of experiencing further catastrophe. Why do people opt to continuously live where they are prone to natural disasters instead of living at a distance from the coastline? Especially for those who have just experienced the tsunami; what motivates them to make the decision to go back to the coast? As the case study of a community in a fishing village indicates, people know that life near the coast is inevitably entwined with both the severity and fertility of the sea. In other words, what people know is that they cannot have one without the other. Both sides of the sea have conditioned the life of people and that is what they have adapted to. Because of their closeness to the sea, the fertility they have enjoyed and the vulnerability as a coastal community are inseparable for them. When the tsunami struck, they did not know how to save all members of the community, their homes, nor their ships. Whereas, they did know how they should adapt to the inherent instability of their coastal community and how they should revive the community. This process would unfold only after having an understanding of the way in which they needed to adapt to their local bay. As a coastal community they were ready to accept their vulnerability, even immediately after the destruction of the tsunami, as it was the condition in which to enjoy the fertility of the sea as their ancestors had done throughout history.
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