Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://doi.org/10.1007/s10745-022-00362-0
Title: Social Memory in the Mekong's Changing Floodscapes: Narratives of Agrarian Communities' Adaptation
Authors: Thong, Anh Tran 
Rigg, Jonathan 
Taylor, David 
Miller, Michelle Ann 
Pittock, Jamie
Phong, Thanh Le
Keywords: Science & Technology
Social Sciences
Life Sciences & Biomedicine
Anthropology
Environmental Studies
Sociology
Environmental Sciences & Ecology
Community resilience
Human-environment interactions
Social memory
Transformative adaptation
Vietnamese Mekong Delta
CLIMATE-CHANGE
INFRASTRUCTURE DEVELOPMENT
RESILIENCE
MANAGEMENT
DELTA
DRIVERS
PLACE
WATER
GOVERNANCE
STRATEGIES
Issue Date: Oct-2022
Publisher: SPRINGER/PLENUM PUBLISHERS
Citation: Thong, Anh Tran, Rigg, Jonathan, Taylor, David, Miller, Michelle Ann, Pittock, Jamie, Phong, Thanh Le (2022-10). Social Memory in the Mekong's Changing Floodscapes: Narratives of Agrarian Communities' Adaptation. HUMAN ECOLOGY 50 (5) : 879-893. ScholarBank@NUS Repository. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10745-022-00362-0
Abstract: Rural adaptation encompasses place-based perceptions, behaviors, livelihoods, and traditional ways of life associated with local environments. These perceptions, norms, and practices are disturbed by coupled environment-development externalities. This study employs the Vietnamese Mekong floodplains as an exemplary case to illustrate how floods impact agrarian communities and how they have experienced flood alterations driven by hydropower development and climate change in recent years. Drawing on thematic and narrative analyses of qualitative data (focus group discussions and interviews) collected in three agrarian communities in the Vietnamese Mekong floodplains, sources drawn from various news outlets, and academic materials, we argue that disrupted flood environments in the floodplains have triggered affective flood reminiscences, catalysing shifts to incremental and transformative adaptation to achieve resilience. We build a nuanced understanding of how social memory helps to enhance human–environment relationships in response to highly complex hydrological dynamics in the delta.
Source Title: HUMAN ECOLOGY
URI: https://scholarbank.nus.edu.sg/handle/10635/243049
ISSN: 0300-7839
1572-9915
DOI: 10.1007/s10745-022-00362-0
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