Guy Jackson, Karen McNamara, Bradd Witt. A Framework for Disaster Vulnerability in a Small Island in the Southwest Pacific: A Case Study of Emae Island, Vanuatu[J]. International Journal of Disaster Risk Science, 2017, 8(4): 358-373. doi: 10.1007/s13753-017-0145-6
Citation: Guy Jackson, Karen McNamara, Bradd Witt. A Framework for Disaster Vulnerability in a Small Island in the Southwest Pacific: A Case Study of Emae Island, Vanuatu[J]. International Journal of Disaster Risk Science, 2017, 8(4): 358-373. doi: 10.1007/s13753-017-0145-6

A Framework for Disaster Vulnerability in a Small Island in the Southwest Pacific: A Case Study of Emae Island, Vanuatu

doi: 10.1007/s13753-017-0145-6
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We would like to acknowledge the people of Emae Island, Vanuatu for their time, energy, and enthusiasm during the fieldwork. There were many other people in Vanuatu who made this research possible, particularly in the difficult times during the El Niño drought of 2015/2016. The lead author would particularly like to thank staff at the Vanuatu Cultural Centre, the Vanuatu National Advisory Board of Climate Change and Disaster Risk Reduction (NAB) along with other government agencies and NGOs based in Port Vila, Vanuatu. A special thank you goes to Raymond Manuake and the entire Manuake family, Laurena Coustard de Nerbonne, and all who helped along the way. This article was greatly improved by the comments and suggestions of two anonymous reviewers.

  • Available Online: 2021-04-26
  • The societal costs of disasters around the world are continuing to increase and Pacific Island countries are considered some of the most vulnerable. This is primarily due to a combination of high hazard exposure coupled with a range of social, economic, physical, and political vulnerabilities. This article contributes to the growing body of work that aims to understand the causal factors of disaster vulnerability, but with a specific focus on small island developing states. The article first develops a framework for understanding disaster vulnerability, drawing on extensive literature and the well-established Methods for the Improvement of Vulnerability in Europe (MOVE) framework, and second, applies this adapted framework using empirically-derived data from fieldwork on Emae Island, Vanuatu to provide a working understanding of the causal elements of disaster vulnerability. Drawn from a significant body of scholarship at the time, the MOVE framework was primarily developed as a heuristic tool in which disaster vulnerability is considered to be a function of exposure, susceptibility (socially, economically, physically, culturally, environmentally, institutionally), and a lack of resilience. We posit that this adapted framework for small islands should also include historical susceptibility, and we prefer livelihood resilience (as capabilities, social capital, knowledge, participation, and human rights) over lack of resilience. We maintain that understanding disaster vulnerability holistically, which is inclusive of both strengths and drawbacks, is crucial to ensure that limited resources can target the causal factors that produce vulnerability and help safeguard and improve livelihoods in both the short and long term.
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