Tsunami, tourism and threats to local livelihoods: The case of indigenous sea nomads in Southern Thailand
Title | Tsunami, tourism and threats to local livelihoods: The case of indigenous sea nomads in Southern Thailand |
Annotated Record | Not Annotated |
Year of Publication | 2018 |
Authors | Neef A, Attavanich M, Kongpan P, Jongkraichak M |
Secondary Authors | Neef A, Grayman JHession |
Secondary Title | Community, Environment and Disaster Risk Management |
Volume | 19 |
Pagination | 141-164 |
Publisher | Emerald Publishing Limited |
Key themes | Dispossession-grabbing, Environment, MarginalisedPeople |
Abstract | The 2004 Indian Ocean Tsunami had a deep and long-term impact on communities along Thailand’s Andaman Coast. In this chapter, the authors examine how three communities of indigenous, formerly seafaring people (chao leh) have been affected by post-tsunami tourism developments. Taking Devine and Ojeda’s (2017) concept of ‘violent tourism geographies’ as a theoretical lens, the authors analyse various practices of dispossession, including enclosure, extraction, erasure, commodification, destructive creation and neo-colonialism. The findings of this chapter suggest that all three communities found themselves subjected to radical transformations of their socioeconomic and cultural environment, yet in distinctive ways and with varying degrees of agency. |
URL | https://www.emerald.com/insight/content/doi/10.1108/S2040-726220180000019008/full/html |
Availability | Copyright Book |
Countries | Thailand |
Document Type | Book Section |
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