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‘Natural’ disaster? A retrospect into the causes of the late-2004 typhoon disaster in Eastern Luzon, Philippines
Authors:Jean-Christophe Gaillard  Catherine C Liamzon  Jessica D Villanueva  
Institution:aUMR 5194 Pacte CNRS, Institut de Géographie Alpine, Université Joseph Fourier—Grenoble I, 14 bis Avenue Marie Reynoard, 38100 Grenoble, France;bANGOC—Asian NGO Coalition for Agrarian Reform and Rural Development, 6-A Malumanay Street, U.P. Village, Diliman, Quezon City 1101, Philippines;cDepartment of Geography, College of Social Sciences and Philosophy, University of the Philippines Diliman, Quezon City 1101, Philippines
Abstract:Between 14 November and 4 December 2004, four successive tropical depressions and typhoons lashed the Eastern coast of Luzon in the Philippines. Heavy rainfall triggered massive landslides and devastating flash floods, which brought tremendous damage and killed more than 1600 people. Immediately after the disaster, there was a media and political consensus to incrimate ‘extraordinary’ natural phenomena and widespread deforestation as responsible for the catastrophe. We argue that the tragedy that befell the municipalities of General Nakar, Infanta and Real, among other devastated areas, is enmeshed in a deeper tangle of causal factors that are political, socio-economic and demographic in nature. These factors include unmanaged population growth, difficult access to land and resources, corruption within the government, and power of the elite.
Keywords:Philippines  Disaster  Vulnerability  Unmanaged population growth  Access to land and resources  Corruption
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