|
PUBLICATIONS
Current GR Issue
Recent GR Issues
Subscribe
to the GR
January 1999 Issue
Instructions for Authors
Contact the GR Editor
About the Geographical Review
Search the GR Index
FOCUS on Geography
Magazine
Ubique
Maps,
Atlases, and Books

|
Geographical Review
January 1999, Vol. 89 (1), pp. 74-93
THE EXTRAORDINARY AND THE EVERYDAY IN EXPLANATIONS
OF VULNERABILITY TO AN OIL SPILL
KIRSTIN DOW
ABSTRACT:
Losses from an oil spill in 1992 differed substantially among
coastal resource users on the Malaysian island of Langkawi. Even
among the small-scale fishers, those generally considered to be
the most vulnerable to such an event, losses varied significantly.
This investigation of vulnerability examines causes for the distribution
of losses, including fishers' ability to mediate their exposure
to risks and the variety of coping strategies they adopted. Explanations
for differences in vulnerability are found both in the everyday
interactions of processes shaping vulnerability and in the ways
in which the "extraordinary" circumstances of a disaster
alter those everyday processes.
Keywords: fishers, hazards, Malaysia, oil spill, vulnerability
DR. DOW is an assistant professor of earth sciences at the
University of South Carolina, Columbia, South Carolina 29208.
|