To read this content please select one of the options below:

Interconnected geoscience applied to disaster and risk: case study from SECMOL, Ladakh, N. India

Michael Petterson (School of Science, Auckland University of Technology, Auckland, New Zealand)
Lanka Nanayakkara (King Edward Parade, Auckland, New Zealand)
Norgay Konchok (SECMOL, Leh, India)
Rebecca Norman (SECMOL, Leh, India)
Sonam Wangchuk (SECMOL, Leh, India)
Malin Linderoth (SECMOL, Leh, India)

Disaster Prevention and Management

ISSN: 0965-3562

Article publication date: 27 November 2019

Issue publication date: 16 April 2020

216

Abstract

Purpose

The purpose of this paper is to apply the concept of “Interconnected Geoscience” to a disaster and risk reduction (DRR) case study at SECMOL College, near Leh, Ladakh, N. India. Interconnected geoscience is a model that advocates holistic approaches to geoscience for development. This paper reports research/practical work with Ladakhi students/staff, undertaking community-oriented DRR exercises in hazard awareness, DRR themed village/college mapping, vulnerability assessments and DRR management scenario development. The geoscientific hazard analysis work is published within a separate sister paper, with results feeding into this work. This work addresses aspects of, and contributes to, the DRR research(science)-policy-interface conversation.

Design/methodology/approach

Interconnected geoscience methodologies for DRR here are: the application of geoscience for hazard causality, spatial distribution, frequency and impact assessment, for earthquakes, floods and landslides, within the SECMOL area; the generation of community-developed DRR products and services of use to a range of end-users; the development of a contextual geoscience approach, informed by social-developmental-issues; and the active participation of SECMOL students/teachers and consequent integration of local world-views and wisdom within DRR research. Initial DRR awareness levels of students were assessed with respect to earthquakes/floods/landslides/droughts. Following hazard teaching sessions, students engaged in a range of DRR exercises, and produced DRR themed maps, data, tables and documented conversations of relevance to DRR management.

Findings

Students levels of hazard awareness were variable, generally low for low-frequency hazards (e.g. earthquakes) and higher for hazards such as floods/landslides which either are within recent memory, or have higher frequencies. The 2010 Ladakhi flood disaster has elevated aspects of flood-hazard knowledge. Landslides and drought hazards were moderately well understood. Spatial awareness was identified as a strength. The application of an interconnected geoscience approach immersed within a student+staff college community, proved to be effective, and can rapidly assess/build upon awareness levels and develop analytical tools for the further understanding of DRR management. This approach can assist Ladakhi regional DRR management in increasing the use of regional capability/resources, and reducing the need for external inputs.

Practical implications

A series of recommendations for the DRR geoscience/research-policy-practice area include: adopting an “interconnected geoscience” approach to DRR research, involving scientific inputs to DRR; using and developing local capability and resources for Ladakhi DRR policy and practice; using/further-developing DRR exercises presented in this paper, to integrate science with communities, and further-empower communities; taking account of the findings that hazard awareness is variable, and weak, for potentially catastrophic hazards, such as earthquakes, when designing policy and practice for raising DRR community awareness; ensuring that local values/world views/wisdom inform all DRR research, and encouraging external “experts” to carefully consider these aspects within Ladakh-based DRR work; and further-developing DRR networks across Ladakh that include pockets of expertise such as SECMOL.

Originality/value

The term “interconnected geoscience” is highly novel, further developing thinking within the research/science-policy-practice interface. This is the first time an exercise such as this has been undertaken in the Ladakh Himalaya.

Keywords

Acknowledgements

SECMOL are thanked for their agreement to undertake this work with their students, and publish key results, including examples of exercise outputs. SECMOL staff are thanked for their energy and efforts with respect to this research, and active involvement in the research. Two anonymous referees and the generous help of the Chief Editor, J.C. Gaillard, greatly improved earlier versions of this paper.

Citation

Petterson, M., Nanayakkara, L., Konchok, N., Norman, R., Wangchuk, S. and Linderoth, M. (2020), "Interconnected geoscience applied to disaster and risk: case study from SECMOL, Ladakh, N. India", Disaster Prevention and Management, Vol. 29 No. 3, pp. 266-286. https://doi.org/10.1108/DPM-08-2019-0248

Publisher

:

Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2019, Emerald Publishing Limited

Related articles