Journal ArticleOpen Access
Unearthing the ripple effects of power and resilience in large river deltas
Authors
Author Affiliations
KTH Royal Institute of Technology, Can Tho University, Center for Environmental and Geographic Information Services, Wageningen University & Research
Published InEnvironmental Science & Policy
Year2019
Citations25
Abstract
Historically, flood resilience in large river deltas has been strongly tied to institutional and infrastructural interventions to manage flood risk (such as building of embankments and drainage structures). However, the introduction of infrastructural works has inevitably brought unforeseen, major consequences, such as biodiversity and accelerated land subsidence, endangering the fertile characteristics that made them interesting places to live in in the first place. These ripple effects have sparked, a reconsideration of what deltas are, questioning the very separation and control between nature and culture, and how deltas are to be dealt with. These effects have further sparked changing modalities of power that tend to be overlooked by delta and resilience scholars alike. As a result, there is a real risk…
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Fields & Keywords
Physical SciencesEnvironmental ScienceGlobal and Planetary ChangeFlood Risk Assessment and ManagementVietnamese History and Culture StudiesHydropower, Displacement, Environmental ImpactEnvironmental resource managementEnvironmental planningWater resource managementArchaeologyPsychiatryPsychotherapistThermodynamicsAerospace engineering