The Indian Ocean Tsunami, which devastated 70 percent of Sri
Lanka's coastline and killed an estimated 35,000 people, was
remarkable both for the magnitude of the disaster and for the
unprecedented scale of the relief and recovery operations mounted
by national and international agencies. The reconstruction process
was soon hampered by political patronage, by the competing efforts
of hundreds of foreign humanitarian organizations, and by the
ongoing civil war.
The book is framed within this larger political and social
context, offering descriptions and comparisons between two regions
(southwest vs. eastern coast) and four ethnic communities
(Sinhalese, Tamils, Muslims, and Burghers) to illustrate how
disaster relief unfolded in a culturally pluralistic political
landscape. Approaching the issue from four disciplinary
perspectives - anthropology, demography, political science, and
disaster studies - chapters by experts in the field analyse
regional and ethnic patterns of post-tsunami reconstruction
according to different sectors of Sri Lankan society. Demonstrating
the key importance of comprehending the local cultural contexts of
disaster recovery processes, the book is a timely and useful
contribution to the existing literature.
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