Back to Search Start Over

Building Resilience to Chronic Landslide Hazard Through Citizen Science

Authors :
Cieslik, Katarzyna
Shakya, Puja
Uprety, Madhab
Dewulf, Art
Russell, Caroline
Clark, Julian
Dhital, Megh Raj
Dhakal, Amrit
Cieslik, Katarzyna
Shakya, Puja
Uprety, Madhab
Dewulf, Art
Russell, Caroline
Clark, Julian
Dhital, Megh Raj
Dhakal, Amrit
Source :
ISSN: 2296-6463
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

Landslides disrupt livelihoods, cause loss of human lives and damages to property and infrastructure. In the case of Nepal, the destructive impact of landslides has been steadily increasing as a result of the rising occupation of marginal land and extreme weather events caused by climate change. In particular, the impacts of seasonal, shallow landslides have been underestimated due to underreporting, and lack appropriate policy response. Within this paper, we argue that citizen science – the practice of incorporating the general public in the process of knowledge co-production – may help address this issue by increasing the knowledge base of stakeholders at different levels. We present the preliminary results from an interdisciplinary scoping study of two landslide sites in Western Nepal, in Bajhang and Bajura, where the Landslide-EVO research project, including a citizen science component, is currently being implemented. The aim of the project is to innovate participatory environmental monitoring and to generate evidence to support resilience. Our exploratory qualitative investigation outlines the strategies currently employed by the local communities that continue living in the landslide affected areas. These include demographic shifts and patterns, land use changes and occupational diversification. We argue that these existing local adaptation and mitigation practices compound a wealth of experiential knowledge. Based on evidence from literature, as well as our first-hand experience of starting citizen science activities in the both landslide sites, we argue that citizen science has the potential to build on local knowledge base and strengthen the adaptive capacities of different level stakeholders. Our theoretical contribution is the proposed typology of citizen-science interventions. We distinguish between community science, participatory environmental monitoring and virtual citizen science, providing examples of how they can benefit stakeholders at different l

Details

Database :
OAIster
Journal :
ISSN: 2296-6463
Notes :
application/pdf, Frontiers in Earth Science 7 (2019), ISSN: 2296-6463, ISSN: 2296-6463, English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1200319145
Document Type :
Electronic Resource