Abstract
Purpose
This paper asks what was the state of building-code enforcement and citizen – government collaboration in disaster preparedness when an earthquake hit Kathmandu metropolitan city (KMC) in 2015? It reviewed government documents, analyzed media reports, interviewed building-code monitoring officers and carried out a detailed case study of the earthquake-damaged Park View Horizon Housing Apartment (PVHA) Complex. The research found several earthquake-resilience issues. They were enforcement-vulnerability (Building bylaws, planning permit and building code); institutional-coordination vulnerability; Apartment-regulation vulnerability; technological vulnerability; and citizen-government-collaboration vulnerability.
Design/methodology/approach
The study area of this research is KMC, and this research is based on content analysis, field observation and interview. It has reviewed all the newspapers and media reports that had covered earthquake issues during and after the 2015 disaster, as well as the articles published in Nepal, South Asia, the USA, New Zealand and Haiti. The literature on Nepal’s building code, seismic history and institutional arrangements for governing earthquake-related issues were reviewed. After field observation of some of the damaged apartments, a detailed case study of PVHA Complex was carried out.
Findings
The research found several earthquake-resilience issues. They were enforcement-vulnerability (Building bylaws, planning permit and building code); institutional-coordination vulnerability; Apartment-regulation vulnerability; technological vulnerability; and citizen-government-collaboration vulnerability
Research limitations/implications
A limitation of this study was its heavy reliance on content analysis, one case study and a few interviews and discussions with affected residents, local governments and developers.
Practical implications
This study would help enhance disaster governance in developing nations.
Social implications
The citizen–government collaborative approach to earthquake resilience would enhance human resilience to disaster at individual and community levels.
Originality/value
Since this is the first research carried out on the state of building code and institutional resilience at the time of the 2015 earthquake in Nepal, it is original and provides policy insights for earthquake resilience in Nepal.
Subject
Safety, Risk, Reliability and Quality,Building and Construction
Reference57 articles.
1. Agrawal, B. (2015), “Dharahara tower then and now: a history of earthquakes in Nepal”, available at: http://blogs.wsj.com/indiarealtime/2015/04/25/dharahara-minaret-then-and-now-a-history-of-earthquakes-in-nepal/
2. Institutional framework, key stakeholders and community preparedness for earthquake induced disaster management in Balochistan;Disaster Prevention and Management: An International Journal,2012
3. Ties that bond, ties that build: social capital and governments in post disaster recovery;Studies in Emergent Order,2011
4. Earthquake fatalities: the interaction of nature and political economy;Journal of Public Economics,2005
5. The challenges of disaster governance in an Indonesian multi-hazards city: a case of Semarang, Central Java;Procedia – Social and Behavioral Sciences,2016
Cited by
1 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献