This volume examines how local communities respond and adapt to ecological changes and disasters resulting from climate change. The main aim of the book is to understand the range of human responses to ecological change and to contextualise the reasons for adopting any particular adaptive strategy by a community. Through the help of specific case studies presented as individual chapters, the book aims to find out whether adaptation due to environmental stress is an individual decision and, therefore, is an isolated phenomenon, or if resilience and adaptation are part of the same action paradigm of society as a whole in response to environmental change. Of particular interest are the case studies of climate change or disasters that have rendered the site unsuitable for the return of its community at present, and thus necessitated the relocation of such communities to new locations. The case studies in the book focus on regions in India, but cover different parts of the world as well, and address concepts of resilience, vulnerability, risk, adaptation, and mitigation. The book will be useful for students and researchers in the fields of geography, disaster management, environmental science, and anthropology.
Chapter
1. Resilience, Adaptation and Migration: Exploring the Range of
Human Response to Climatic Change.
Chapter
2. Spatio-temporal variation of
drought events over eastern Rajasthan (India): A geo-spatial approach.-
Chapter
3. Evaluation of Hydro-geomorphic Response to Climate Change in North
Sikkim District, Sikkim, India.
Chapter
4. Disasters, Climate Change and
Migration Issues in Fiji and the Pacific: An Overview.
Chapter
5. Assessing
the Microclimatic Environmental Indicators of Climate Change of a Temperate
Valley in the Western Himalayan region.
Chapter
6. Is technology the nexus
between climate change and disaster induced human displacement?.
Chapter
7.
Climate Change Hazard Perception and Gender Empowerment for Resilience in the
regions of Tropical Asia.
Chapter
8. Climate Change and the Rising Hazard
Potential in Lahaul & Spiti: Himachal Pradesh.
Chapter
9. Climate Change and
Disaster-induced Displacement in Global South: A Review.
Chapter
10. Climate
Change, Disaster and Adaptations - Human Responses to ecological changes.-
Chapter
11. Assessing Impact of Climate variability on potential agricultural
land suitability in Nalanda District, Bihar.
Chapter
12. Adaptation of the
Agri-based Society to Environmental Changes in Thar Desert.
Chapter
13.
Human response towards COVID-19 pandemic in terms of adaptation, displacement
and climate change in India.
Chapter
14. Human adaptation during Covid-19
Pandemic: the role of perceived stress and resilience.
Chapter
15.
Evolutionary forces and Human migration: How sapiens conquered the world.-
Chapter
16. Adjustment of the Coastal Communities in response to Climate
variability and sea level rise in the Sundarban, West Bengal, India.
Chapter
17. ANALYSING THE VEHICLE INDUCED AIR POLLUTION AND ITS IMPACT IN THE
AZADPUR MANDI, DELHI.
Chapter
18. Human Mobility Response to Natural
Disasters and Environmental Change.
Chapter
19. Temperature and Rainfall
Extremes over Southern India (1969-2014):Frequency Distribution and Trends.
Professor A.R. Siddiqui is Professor and Head, Department of Geography, University of Allahabad. Having finished his B.Sc, M.Sc, M.Phil &Ph.D degree from Aligarh Muslim University, Aligarh, Professor Siddiqui first joined Chaudhary Charan Singh University, Meerut in the year 1999 as lecturer and later University of Allahabad University in 2001. Prof Siddiqui has completed NNRMS training course and three international training programmes sponsored by United Nations. He has also obtained P.G. Diploma in Geo-Information Science with specialization in Geo-Hazards from IIRS, Dehradun and ITC, Netherlands. His specialization is in arid zone research, urban environment issues and application of remote sensing and GIS in land degradation studies. From 2016, he has served as the Secretary of Indian Institute of Geomorphologists (IGI). Prof Siddiqui has visited France, Russia, China, Belgium, The Netherlands, Switzerland, Italy, Austria, Greece, and Nepal for academic purposes and is a recipient of excellence award in the year 2018 by university of Allahabad.
Dr. Avijit Sahay is currently a Post-Doctoral Scholar in the Department of Humanities and Social Sciences, Indian Institute of Technology Bombay. He did his PhD on Riverbank Erosion in Majuli Island of Assam from Department of Geography, University of Allahabad, Allahabad. His works on Majuli Island have been presented in International Conferences and have been published in national and international journals. He is also the Associate Editor of the Oriental Anthropologist-an international journal of the science of man and now published by SAGE Publications.