Ngôn ngữ
Rationale
Natural and human-made disasters are extreme manifestations of larger changes in environmental conditions and in the relationship between people and the environment. The impacts of these changes on human life in Vietnam’s mountains, plains, coasts and waterways, and rural and urban areas, are profound and varied. The Government of Vietnam has issued policies and implemented actions to cope with negative impacts of environmental change in general, and disasters in particular. At the same time, local communities and households have also had their own ways of responding to natural and man-made disasters, with resourceful responses to crises such as storms, floods, landslides, scarcity and disease, and to the impacts of industrial, urban, agricultural and hydropower development, to name just a few pressing challenges.
In that context, it is essential to investigate how people and the state in Vietnam think about and respond to change and crisis in their environment. The term environment can encompass social, cultural, technological, institutional, economic and natural settings. Ethnographic analysis of such issues promises new theoretical and empirical insights, especially in the current global, national and local contexts of the Covid-19 pandemic. Anthropologists possess the comparative perspective and methodologies to illuminate the multifaceted experiences and effects of environmental change. Ethnographic analysis can shed light on state policies and practices, while also uncovering diverse modes of coping by individuals, households, communities and ethnic groups to environmental conditions in general, and natural and man-made disasters in particular.
Aims and Themes
The University of Social Sciences and Humanities (USSH) organizes this conference for anthropologists and researchers to share their research findings and discuss relevant issues on the environment in contemporary Vietnam. Drawing on anthropological approaches, each paper should focus on at least one of the topics as follows:
Date and Venue
Format
Submission Guidelines
Contact Addresses
Abstracts, full papers and queries should send to:
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