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Governing disasters: a comparative analysis of the 1931, 1954 and 1998 middle-Yangzi floods in Hubei

Governing disasters: a comparative analysis of the 1931, 1954 and 1998 middle-Yangzi floods in Hubei
Governing disasters: a comparative analysis of the 1931, 1954 and 1998 middle-Yangzi floods in Hubei
Over the course of the twentieth-century the Middle Yangzi region experienced three catastrophic floods, in 1931, 1954, and 1998. This chapter uses these mega-floods as prism through which to examine the changing practice, representation, and popular perception of disaster governance in Hubei Province. It describes how a lack of investment in the hydraulic network and a narrow focus upon military objectives weakened the official response to the 1931 flood. It examines archival evidence and oral history testimony to question the generally positive assessment that historians have of the 1954 flood, demonstrating that the disaster resulted in five times as many fatalities as has been acknowledged previously. Finally, this chapter argues that, although the response to the 1998 disaster represented a considerable improvement in governance, the flood itself was exacerbated by long-term unsustainable environmental policies.
67-102
Palgrave Macmillan
Courtney, Christopher
9a23b876-9174-4087-b508-4852c15d1739
Blanchard, J.M.
Lin, K.C.
Courtney, Christopher
9a23b876-9174-4087-b508-4852c15d1739
Blanchard, J.M.
Lin, K.C.

Courtney, Christopher (2017) Governing disasters: a comparative analysis of the 1931, 1954 and 1998 middle-Yangzi floods in Hubei. In, Blanchard, J.M. and Lin, K.C. (eds.) Governance, Domestic Change, and Social Policy in China. New York. Palgrave Macmillan, pp. 67-102. (doi:10.1057/978-1-137-02285-1_4).

Record type: Book Section

Abstract

Over the course of the twentieth-century the Middle Yangzi region experienced three catastrophic floods, in 1931, 1954, and 1998. This chapter uses these mega-floods as prism through which to examine the changing practice, representation, and popular perception of disaster governance in Hubei Province. It describes how a lack of investment in the hydraulic network and a narrow focus upon military objectives weakened the official response to the 1931 flood. It examines archival evidence and oral history testimony to question the generally positive assessment that historians have of the 1954 flood, demonstrating that the disaster resulted in five times as many fatalities as has been acknowledged previously. Finally, this chapter argues that, although the response to the 1998 disaster represented a considerable improvement in governance, the flood itself was exacerbated by long-term unsustainable environmental policies.

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Governing Disasters in Governance, Domestic Change, and Social Policy in China (dragged) - Version of Record
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e-pub ahead of print date: 30 October 2016
Published date: 2017

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Local EPrints ID: 422658
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/422658
PURE UUID: 98d15dcd-d2f9-4a8d-b20d-dd3f1cc927e2

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Date deposited: 27 Jul 2018 16:30
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 20:46

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Contributors

Author: Christopher Courtney
Editor: J.M. Blanchard
Editor: K.C. Lin

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