Abstract

Isolated communities on small islands are often characterized as vulnerable and marginalized. We studied the recent history of Laingpatehi, a village on Ruang Island off the north coast of Sulawesi, Indonesia to show that the marginalization-vulnerability nexus can be offset by capacity and social cohesion to enable sustainable livelihoods. The island has been impacted by volcanic eruptions, earthquakes, and competition for marine resources from mainland-based fishermen. The community has shown a remarkable ability to cope and prosper in the face of a series of external hazards. We used a sustainable livelihoods approach to identify the assets that enabled the villagers to cope. Strong social cohesion was central to the ability to organize the community and confront hazards. A diversified livelihood strategy drawing on the small island environment and its coastal and marine resources, income generating activities in a distant satellite village, and significant remittances from employment in other parts of Indonesia underpinned people’s capacities to face hazards. Government assistance played a supporting role. The case of Laingpatehi demonstrates how remoteness, rather than being a source of vulnerability, can provide access to existing resources and facilitate innovation. Disaster risk reduction strategies should focus more on reinforcing these existing capacities to deal with hazards and less on physical protection and postdisaster responses.

Highlights

  • Vulnerability to multiple hazards is thought to be a characteristic of small, remote island communities (Lewis 2009)

  • We studied the recent history of Laingpatehi, a village on Ruang Island off the north coast of Sulawesi, Indonesia to show that the marginalization-vulnerability nexus can be offset by capacity and social cohesion to enable sustainable livelihoods

  • A diversified livelihood strategy drawing on the small island environment and its coastal and marine resources, income generating activities in a distant satellite village, and significant remittances from employment in other parts of Indonesia underpinned people’s capacities to face hazards

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Summary

Introduction

Vulnerability to multiple hazards is thought to be a characteristic of small, remote island communities (Lewis 2009). An indicator of vulnerability of small islands has been developed by Pelling and Uitto (2001) based on the United Nations Human Development Index (UNDP 2000) They present data on disaster impacts and losses collected by the Centre for Research on the Epidemiology of Disasters. Many small islands are located at the geographical periphery and are socioeconomically and politically marginal (Wisner and Gaillard 2009; Kelman 2010). Their risk stems from their exposure to hazards in addition to their marginal status that reduces their ability to deal with emergencies. Some factors that contribute to their marginal status include the absence of warning systems, and institutional delays in evacuation and distribution of basic relief support (Wisner et al 2004; Terry and Goff 2012). Wisner et al (2012) show that small, isolated communities often receive no support or even acknowledgment of the occurrence of a disaster

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