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%T Migration as an Adaptation Strategy and Its Consequences on Coastal Society: Experience from Bangladesh
%A Mallick, Bishawjit
%P 24
%V 96
%D 2011
%= 2012-11-30T10:22:00Z
%~ USB Köln
%> https://nbn-resolving.org/urn:nbn:de:0168-ssoar-405487
%X "In this article I investigated the complex relationship between disasters, migration and poverty
in a case study carried out in one of the poorest and most disaster-prone countries in the
world. The focus was set on individual household and community adaptation strategies.
Through a literature review in this field I have developed and tested my own analytical model.
In an extensive field survey, which was carried out in the southwest coastal region of Bangladesh,
I asked around 280 residents who were affected by cyclone Aila in 2009. Original in
this study is the explicit testing of the effectiveness of adaptive coping strategies to reduce
the damage cost and its consequences to the social structural changes. Here, I considered
‘migration’ as a strategic step to cope with the adverse effect of cyclone Aila. In this study, I
found that affected people act as hunters towards the relief materials immediately after the
cyclone. When the relief programme was closed, male members of the family started moving
towards nearer cities to find an income. Most of them started to pull rickshaws or to work as
labourer in industries. They live at slum-environment to accumulate more money for their
dependants; their out-migration from the family creates more social problems for their spouse
as well. Accordingly, their spouse should take care of other family members and children. In
most of the cases, those dependants move towards cities and and they also become migrants
and start working there. However, it is evident that a lot of people do not bring their
family and children and get married again. It introduces changes in local social structure.
Furthermore, based on the income and asset distribution at the community level, this study
developed societal cluster of migration and, correlating with previous disaster and census
data, it introduces a new methodological tool for analysing disaster-migration nexus." [author's abstract]
%C DEU
%C Bielefeld
%G en
%9 Konferenzbeitrag
%W GESIS - http://www.gesis.org
%~ SSOAR - http://www.ssoar.info