Cartographies of law: Mapping the inter-legalities of disaster recovery
Abstract
This thesis considers shelter-recovery and relocation projects
undertaken in the wake of Typhoon Haiyan. It transforms
Boaventura de Sousa Santos’ “structural places” theory into
an analytical methodology, to identify the inter-legal effects of
complex regulatory environments. The thesis identifies the most
significant sites of communicative interaction for the
humanitarian shelter project, and the social agency,
institutions, forms of legitimation, power, law, and common sense
particular to each place. Once mapped, three case studies are
developed from fieldwork carried out in the Philippines, in
Tacloban City and on Bantayan Island, following Typhoon Haiyan
(local name Yolanda) in late 2013. In both sites, Disaster Risk
Reduction (DRR) and climate-adaptation were incorporated into
shelter reconstruction endeavour.
The three case studies enable the recovery to be analysed from
place-informed vantage points: from the site of the relationship
between the state and those over whom it has jurisdiction, the
relationship between the donor and implementing organisation, the
relationship between members of the humanitarian community and
the local community, and from the site of the project itself.
The thesis demonstrates that while local forms of law regulate
each of these sites, the regulatory matrix that directs action
depends instead on the complex interaction between multiple legal
orders and rationalities. In undertaking this task, the thesis
demonstrates the usefulness of Santos’ structural places theory
as a methodology. Further, it further provides insights on both
adverse and positive outcomes in post-disaster shelter recovery.
Description
Citation
Collections
Source
Type
Book Title
Entity type
Access Statement
License Rights
Restricted until
2099-12-31
Downloads
File
Description