Putting houses in place: rebuilding communities in post-tsunami Sri Lanka

Disasters. 2009 Jul;33(3):436-56. doi: 10.1111/j.1467-7717.2008.01082.x. Epub 2008 Oct 31.

Abstract

This paper interrogates the social and political geographies of resettlement and reconstruction of temporary and permanent shelters, which are fundamental to rebuilding tsunami-affected communities. War and ethnic cleavages are an endemic feature of Sri Lanka's social polity, and uneven development processes in the country are clearly visible. This paper draws attention to these spaces of inequality by drawing on in-depth interviews and participant observation carried out in Eastern and Southern Sri Lanka. It argues that communities' concerns and anxieties regarding displacement and resettlement have tended to be articulated against prevailing fault lines of war and inequality. This is the backdrop against which communities negotiated the recovery process. My fieldwork shows that it is critical to understand that disaster and development relief are ingrained within context specificities. Relief efforts therefore need to recognise that the process of 'putting houses in place' should be embedded within local social relations.

MeSH terms

  • Housing
  • Humans
  • Interviews as Topic
  • Politics
  • Relief Work / organization & administration*
  • Residence Characteristics*
  • Social Conditions
  • Sri Lanka
  • Tidal Waves*