Summary: | 碩士 === 南華大學 === 建築與景觀學系環境藝術碩士班 === 98 === This study mainly discussed the attacks that the aboriginal Pnguu Tribe of Tsou nationality had suffered under hurricane Morakot, the conditions during the process of fighting natural calamities and rescuing emergency, the operating procedures of carrying out post-disaster rehabilitation and reconstruction, as well as consequent divergence and incompatibility of reconstruction direction.
Firstly, through literature and data collection, it made a before-and-after-disaster comparison based on showing the pre-disaster industrial economy situation and developing direction of community building in Pnguu Tribe.
Then, it used field observation to investigate the influences of hurricane Morakot on Pnguu Tribe. Through introducing the process of fighting natural calamities and rescuing emergency in Pnguu Tribe, it discussed relevant effects and proposed ways of improvement. By interviews and questionnaire statistics, it further found out sufferers’ problems and opinions during post-disaster reconstruction there.
Finally, it generalized the causality of consequent divergence and incompatibility about reconstruction direction in Pnguu Tribe, and attempted to summarize the focus point of future common perspective.
This study discovered that main reason for serious disaster in Pnguu Tribe is not prompt casualties or property losses but the underlying problems that break out during disaster. Many important factors made Pnguu Tribe a serious disaster area, from ecological construction that is neglected in industry and tourism development for long, to traditional culture that is continuously lost in religion and humanities development.
Comparatively speaking, the former problem can be easily realized and solved inside and outside the tribe. However, to solve the latter problem, the tribe should awake again and the outside world should value the frailness and importance of traditional tribal culture.
This study aimed to make us look at the disaster of aboriginal bribe from a new perspective, and provide a more proper visual field for the rehabilitation and reconstruction in stricken aboriginal area.
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