brief communication: loss and damage from a catastrophic landslide in nepal
;K. van der Geest;M. Schindler
anziam journal2016Vol. 16pp. 2347-2350
75
geest2016naturalbrief
Abstract
This brief communication reports key findings of a recent piece of research that
studied the impacts of the 2014 Jure landslide in Sindhupalchok (Nepal) and
the effectiveness of household preventive and coping measures. The
people-centered methods reveal not just what was lost in the disaster, but
also how and why. A key finding of the household survey is that households in
higher income groups incurred higher losses in monetary terms, simply because
they had more to lose. By contrast, lower-income households lost more in
relative terms: the value of their losses amounted to 14 times their annual
earnings. Many lower-income households will never fully recover from this
blow to their livelihoods and wellbeing. The findings have important
implications for discussions on loss and damage valuation, compensation and relief.