Review article: A systematic literature review of research trends and authorships on natural hazards, disasters, risk reduction and climate change in Indonesia
Indonesia is one of the most vulnerable countries to disasters and climate change. While there has been a proliferation of academic publications on natural hazards, risks and disasters on Indonesia, there has not yet been a systematic literature review (SLR) to determine the progress, key topics...
Main Author: | |
---|---|
Format: | Article |
Language: | English |
Published: |
Copernicus Publications
2018-06-01
|
Series: | Natural Hazards and Earth System Sciences |
Online Access: | https://www.nat-hazards-earth-syst-sci.net/18/1785/2018/nhess-18-1785-2018.pdf |
Summary: | Indonesia is one of the most vulnerable countries to disasters and climate
change. While there has been a proliferation of academic publications on
natural hazards, risks and disasters on Indonesia, there has not yet been a
systematic literature review (SLR) to determine the progress, key topics and
authorships. SLR is important so researchers can build upon existing works,
avoid bias, determine major research topics and the need for further research, and
strengthen research capacity in the future. The author conducts a SLR of
publications indexed within the Scopus database from 1900 to 2016 on topics
related to disasters and climate change in Indonesia. Two major findings are
outlined. The <i>first</i> is related to major research topics: (1) natural
hazard, risk and disaster assessments (HRD); (2) disaster risk reduction
(DRR); and (3) climate change risks, vulnerability, impacts and adaptation
(CC). More than half are related to HRD and focus on volcanic eruptions,
tsunamis and earthquakes. Publications on DRR are related to governance,
early-warning systems, and recovery and reconstruction. Those on CC discuss carbon
emission, forestry, governance and sectoral impacts. The author calls for
future research on different hazards, different locations, and impacts of
disasters and climate change. Risks and vulnerability assessments from
hydro-meteorological and geophysical hazards are needed. Other locations
beyond Sumatra and Java islands are to be examined. Urban risk assessments
and the economic and social impacts of disasters and climate change on
vulnerable places and communities are equally important. Risk governance at
the national, local and community level is to be strengthened to increase
resilience. The <i>second</i> finding examines the roles of Indonesian
researchers and organizations. Findings show limited progress in research,
publication and collaboration. International/non-Indonesian authors dominate
the literature, and only half of the publications are co-authored by
Indonesians. International collaborations have been conducted by very few
Indonesian organizations. This could be due to limited experience in
academic collaboration, power play amongst researchers, lack of research
capacity, weak English academic writings skills and limited provisions
within higher-education systems. The author recommends more funding and
incentives for collaborations; training on English academic writing and
journal article publications; capacity building especially for early careers,
female and social science researchers; encouragement of multi-disciplinary
collaborations; and strengthening of science communication in social media
and science-policy advocacy. |
---|---|
ISSN: | 1561-8633 1684-9981 |