PA31D-01
Climate change and natural hazards in the Arctic
Wednesday, 16 December 2015: 08:00
103 (Moscone South)
John C Eichelberger, University of Alaska Fairbanks, Office of the Graduate School, Fairbanks, AK, United States and Laura P. Eichelberger, University of Texas at San Antonio, Anthropology, San Antonio, TX, United States
Abstract:
Climate change is motivating much of the science research in the Arctic. Natural hazards, which have always been with us and can be influenced by climate, also pose a serious threat to sustainability of Arctic communities, the Native cultures they support, and the health and wellbeing of their residents. These are themes of the US Chairship of the Arctic Council. For example, repetitive floods, often associated with spring ice jams, are a particularly severe problem for river communities. People live near rivers because access to food, water and river transportation support an indigenous subsistence lifestyle. Some settlement sites for Indigenous Peoples were mandated by distant authorities without regard to natural hazards, in Alaska no less than in other countries. Thus bad policy of the past casts a long shadow into the future. Remote communities are subject to multiple challenges, including natural hazards, access to education, and limited job opportunities. These intersect to reproduce structural vulnerability and have over time created a need for substantial support from government. In the past 40 years, the themes of “sustainability” and “self reliance” have become prominent strategies for governance at both state and local levels. Communities now struggle to demonstrate their sustainability while grappling with natural hazards and chronic poverty. In the extreme, the shifting of responsibility to resource-poor communities can be called “structural violence”. Accepting the status quo can mean living without sanitation and reliable water supply, leading to the high observed rates of disease not normally encountered in developed countries. Many of the efforts to address climate change and natural hazards are complementary: monitoring the environment; forecasting extreme events; and community-based participatory research and planning. Natural disaster response is complementary to the Arctic Council’s Search and Rescue (SAR) initiative, differing in that those in need of assistance need not be searched for and are not from elsewhere. Despite the obstacles to broad engagement imposed by an absence of roads and primitive telecommunications, an investment needs to be made in getting all stakeholders together for serious planning of disaster prevention, preparedness, and response.