ISBN-13: 9783319949161 / Angielski / Twarda / 2018 / 174 str.
ISBN-13: 9783319949161 / Angielski / Twarda / 2018 / 174 str.
This book analyzes climate change associated natural hazards in the mountainous and coastal areas of Vietnam, and offers a collection of original research papers on Ky Anh (the southern most district of the Ha Tinh province in Central Coast Vietnam) and on Van Chan (a mountain district of the Yen Bai province in Northern Vietnam). The scope of the book allows international comparisons to be made between these two affected areas and other similarly affected locations under constant environmental pressure. Frequent and intense climate change hazards are described, along with a wider context of integrated interpretations, socioeconomic implications and policy responses. The book reports on original research combining methodologies from the natural sciences with approaches in human sciences, providing a transdisciplinary human ecological context to analyze similar situations worldwide. The book is structured in four parts. The first part offers background information, and details the human ecological framework. The geography and topography of the analyzed regions are discussed to reflect the environmental and socioeconomic context of Vietnam's coasts and mountains. The second part addresses the coast of Central Vietnam. The effects of tropical storms, floods, rising sea levels and coastal erosion in Ky Anh are studied to highlight the impacts on the local population and its development perspectives. The third part focuses on the uplands of Northern Vietnam. The effects of cyclones, heavy rains, floods and landslides in the Van Chan Mountains are studied to compare the biophysical and socioeconomic impacts. The last part makes policy recommendations in building resilient landscapes and green cities, and discusses the potential implications of findings for practice in Vietnam. The book addresses a wide array of researchers, geography and economics students, consultants and decision makers interested in the actual status and the likely developments on the physical, socioeconomic and mitigation and adaptation attitudes and policies of climate change associated effects.