Social learning for building community resilience to cyclones: role of indigenous and local knowledge, power, and institutions in coastal Bangladesh

Despite wide recognition of the role of social learning in building community resilience, few studies have thus far analyzed how the power-knowledge-institution matrix shapes social learning processes that in turn foster resilience outcomes. Drawing insights from the biopolitical lens of resilience,...

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Main Authors: Mahed-Ul-Islam Choudhury, C. Emdad. Haque, Ainun Nishat, Sean Byrne
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Resilience Alliance 2021-03-01
Series:Ecology and Society
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.ecologyandsociety.org/vol26/iss1/art5/
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spelling doaj-857efcb5888a449d8c6b1344a2ba28a72021-04-13T12:27:42ZengResilience AllianceEcology and Society1708-30872021-03-01261510.5751/ES-12107-26010512107Social learning for building community resilience to cyclones: role of indigenous and local knowledge, power, and institutions in coastal BangladeshMahed-Ul-Islam Choudhury0C. Emdad. Haque1Ainun Nishat2Sean Byrne3Natural Resources Institute, University of Manitoba, CanadaNatural Resources Institute, University of Manitoba, CanadaCentre for Climate Change and Environmental Research, BRAC University, BangladeshArthur V. Mauro Institute of Peace and Justice, University of Manitoba, CanadaDespite wide recognition of the role of social learning in building community resilience, few studies have thus far analyzed how the power-knowledge-institution matrix shapes social learning processes that in turn foster resilience outcomes. Drawing insights from the biopolitical lens of resilience, we take a critical stance on programmatic interventions for community resilience and social learning, arguing that local knowledge, beliefs, practices, and social memory (SM) are crucial elements in social learning processes for building community resilience to shocks and stresses. In addition, we explore how technologies shape social learning processes and build or strengthen community resilience. Our research, conducted in cyclone-prone coastal zones of Bangladesh, adopts a transformative interpretive framework (TIF) and a community-based participatory approach to empirical investigation. Findings of our research provide evidence that formal institutions frequently exclude indigenous and local knowledge (ILK) from social learning processes, and often subjugate communities to notions of resilience, as defined by nonlocals, that perceive people as subjects of institutional power and objects of scientific knowledge, rather than as active agents. We further found that local communities are able to obtain early warnings of cyclones through ILK of environmental phenomena, such as changing water temperature and animal behavior. Despite an abundance of ILK regarding past cyclones, the 2007 Cyclone Sidr was a surprising event to many and caused considerable loss of life and property. Much of this unpreparedness stemmed from an overall SM deficit - a key to translating knowledge into action. We recommend strengthening efforts to bridge scientific-technical knowledge and ILK to ensure effective social-learning-led resilience outcomes are achieved.https://www.ecologyandsociety.org/vol26/iss1/art5/bangladeshcommunity resiliencecyclonedisastersindigenous knowledgelocal knowledgepowersocial learningsocial memory
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Mahed-Ul-Islam Choudhury
C. Emdad. Haque
Ainun Nishat
Sean Byrne
spellingShingle Mahed-Ul-Islam Choudhury
C. Emdad. Haque
Ainun Nishat
Sean Byrne
Social learning for building community resilience to cyclones: role of indigenous and local knowledge, power, and institutions in coastal Bangladesh
Ecology and Society
bangladesh
community resilience
cyclone
disasters
indigenous knowledge
local knowledge
power
social learning
social memory
author_facet Mahed-Ul-Islam Choudhury
C. Emdad. Haque
Ainun Nishat
Sean Byrne
author_sort Mahed-Ul-Islam Choudhury
title Social learning for building community resilience to cyclones: role of indigenous and local knowledge, power, and institutions in coastal Bangladesh
title_short Social learning for building community resilience to cyclones: role of indigenous and local knowledge, power, and institutions in coastal Bangladesh
title_full Social learning for building community resilience to cyclones: role of indigenous and local knowledge, power, and institutions in coastal Bangladesh
title_fullStr Social learning for building community resilience to cyclones: role of indigenous and local knowledge, power, and institutions in coastal Bangladesh
title_full_unstemmed Social learning for building community resilience to cyclones: role of indigenous and local knowledge, power, and institutions in coastal Bangladesh
title_sort social learning for building community resilience to cyclones: role of indigenous and local knowledge, power, and institutions in coastal bangladesh
publisher Resilience Alliance
series Ecology and Society
issn 1708-3087
publishDate 2021-03-01
description Despite wide recognition of the role of social learning in building community resilience, few studies have thus far analyzed how the power-knowledge-institution matrix shapes social learning processes that in turn foster resilience outcomes. Drawing insights from the biopolitical lens of resilience, we take a critical stance on programmatic interventions for community resilience and social learning, arguing that local knowledge, beliefs, practices, and social memory (SM) are crucial elements in social learning processes for building community resilience to shocks and stresses. In addition, we explore how technologies shape social learning processes and build or strengthen community resilience. Our research, conducted in cyclone-prone coastal zones of Bangladesh, adopts a transformative interpretive framework (TIF) and a community-based participatory approach to empirical investigation. Findings of our research provide evidence that formal institutions frequently exclude indigenous and local knowledge (ILK) from social learning processes, and often subjugate communities to notions of resilience, as defined by nonlocals, that perceive people as subjects of institutional power and objects of scientific knowledge, rather than as active agents. We further found that local communities are able to obtain early warnings of cyclones through ILK of environmental phenomena, such as changing water temperature and animal behavior. Despite an abundance of ILK regarding past cyclones, the 2007 Cyclone Sidr was a surprising event to many and caused considerable loss of life and property. Much of this unpreparedness stemmed from an overall SM deficit - a key to translating knowledge into action. We recommend strengthening efforts to bridge scientific-technical knowledge and ILK to ensure effective social-learning-led resilience outcomes are achieved.
topic bangladesh
community resilience
cyclone
disasters
indigenous knowledge
local knowledge
power
social learning
social memory
url https://www.ecologyandsociety.org/vol26/iss1/art5/
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