1st Edition

Climate Hazard Crises in Asian Societies and Environments

Edited By Troy Sternberg Copyright 2017
    236 Pages 27 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge

    236 Pages 27 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge

    Climate hazards are the world’s most widespread, deadliest and costliest natural disasters. Knowledge of climate hazard dynamics is critical since the impacts of climate change, population growth, development projects and migration affect both the impact and severity of disasters. Current global events highlight how hazards can lead to significant financial losses, increased mortality rates and political instability.

    This book examines climate hazard crises in contemporary Asia, identifying how hazards from the Middle East through South and Central Asia and China have the power to reshape our globalised world. In an era of changing climates, knowledge of hazard dynamics is essential to mitigating disasters and strengthening livelihoods and societies across Asia. By integrating human exposure to climate factors and disaster episodes, the book explores the environmental forces that drive disasters and their social implications. Focusing on a range of Asian countries, landscapes and themes, the chapters address several scales (province, national, regional), different hazards (drought, flood, temperature, storms, dust), environments (desert, temperate, mountain, coastal) and issues (vulnerability, development, management, politics) to present a diverse, comprehensive evaluation of climate hazards in Asia. This book offers an understanding of the challenges climate hazards present, their critical nature and the effort needed to mitigate climate hazards in 21st-century Asia.

    Climate Hazard Crises in Asian Societies and Environments is vital reading for those interested and engaged in Asia’s development and well-being today and will be of interest to those working in Geography, Development Studies, Environmental Sciences, Sociology and Political Science.

    1: An Unstable, Stable Nation? Climate, Water, Migration and Security in Syria from 2006-2011

    Francesco Femia and Caitlin Werrell

    2: Post-disaster reconstruction strategies: a case study in Taiwan

    Yung-Fang Chen

    3: Human amplification of climate hazards: 2010 floods in Pakistan

    Inam Rahim and Henri Rueff

    4: Climate hazards and health in Asia

    Ilan Kelman and Tim Colbourn

    5: Evolving a multi-hazard focused approach for arid Eurasia

    Masato Shinoda

    6: Climate change and security: major challenges for Yemen’s future

    Helen Lackner

    7: Climatic hazards in the Himalayan region

    Prajjwal Panday

    8: China’s natural and constructed hazard regimes

    Troy Sternberg

    9: Temporal and spatial distributions of dust storms in middle Asia: natural and anthropogenic factors

    Leah Orlovsky, Rodica Indoitu, Giorgi Kozhoridze, Madina Batyrbaeva, Irina Vitkovskaya, Dr. Batyr Mamedov and Prof. Nikolai Orlovsky

    10: Climate Hazards in Asian Drylands

    11: Climate Change: Rethinking the local for policy and practice

    Lena Dominelli

    Biography

    Troy Sternberg is a researcher at the School of Geography, Oxford University. His research focuses on climate hazard impact on environments and societies across Asian drylands.