Evaluation
Local Perceptions and Responses to Risk: A study of a Cambodian Village.
- This dissertation
focuses on the ways Khmer peasants living in a landmine-affected community build
their survival strategy in the face of dangers and uncertainties that may
physically, economically and socially impair their lives. Rural families living
in post-conflict areas face a wide range of risks that encompass but are by no
means limited to anti-personnel landmines.Western frames of analysis have assumed that peasants are essentially
risk averse.
- This paper argues that in a situation where families lack livelihood
alternatives, it is by confronting risk that they protect themselves. This
dissertation argues that distinctions between apparently risk prone and risk
averse behaviour are inadequate especially when the professional removal of
landmines is followed by local initiatives to put them back. Indeed such simple
distinction fails to take account of the intricate linkages between time, local
history, social organisation, political system, religious beliefs and human
instinct for survival.
- This dissertation seeks to provide new insights into risk perceptions
by drawing on ethnographic research into the knowledge, attitudes and practices
of Khmer peasants. It is divided into three main chapters. The first chapter
gauges and analyses the local exposure to vulnerability and discusses the array
of risks the ordinary household faces on an everyday basis. The second chapter de-constructs
the Euro-American definition of risk in light of local perceptions, understandings
and risk-related discourse. The last chapter investigates peasants' pragmatic responses
to risk and the ways local resilience, inventiveness and self-reliance form the
basis of their survival strategy, hence crafting their own concept of "risk
subsistence".
Date of Publication Monday, 1 January 2007
Link http://www.gichd.org/fileadmin/pdf/evaluations/database/Cambodia/Study-Risk-Cambodia-KrisnaUK-2006.pdf
Authors Krisna Uk
Language English
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