Abstract

The tsunami disaster that stroked Aceh in 2004 not only resulted in massive casualties and huge economic losses, has also resulted in massive horizontal agrarian conflicts. This article will discuss how the natural disaster causes symmetrical agrarian conflicts among inhabitants of neighborhoods. T

Highlights

  • IntroductionThe tsunami left deep wounds and sorrow for victims This was because the natural disaster claimed about 130,000 lives and made approximately 37,000 missing [1], destroyed infrastructure and a lot of buildings, especially residents housing

  • This paper shows how the tsunami caused the occurrence of agrarian conflicts

  • The question that will be answered is how did the tsunami cause agrarian conflicts among residents of neighborhoods? How did such agrarian conflicts affect the reconstruction effort which is a series of disaster mitigation? This article uses a literature review consisting of research reports, scientific journal articles, and media reports on the impact of the 2004 Aceh tsunami

Read more

Summary

Introduction

The tsunami left deep wounds and sorrow for victims This was because the natural disaster claimed about 130,000 lives and made approximately 37,000 missing [1], destroyed infrastructure and a lot of buildings, especially residents housing. The tsunami caused a massive incident of agrarian conflicts between residents of neighborhoods. This paper shows how the tsunami caused the occurrence of agrarian conflicts. The question that will be answered is how did the tsunami cause agrarian conflicts among residents of neighborhoods (gampong)? How did such agrarian conflicts affect the reconstruction effort which is a series of disaster mitigation? This article would reveal that the tsunami disaster caused agrarian conflicts between neighbors through three things: disappearance of housing land boundaries caused by the tsunami, loss of a land certificate and the death of parents.

Impact of Aceh Tsunami Disaster
12 Airport
Horizontal Agrarian Conflicts Caused By Tsunami
Conclusions and Recommendations
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call