Maya Dania, Wanwalee Inpin, Reni Juwitasari, Y. Miyake, Y. Takeuchi, Takayoshi Maki
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Parameters and variables used to measure the disaster resilience of schools are adapted from the Climate Resilience Model and School Safety Model by Tong et al. (2012), covering three dimensions: 1) institutional issues, 2) physical conditions, and 3) external relationships. Lefebvre's Spatial Triad Framework is applied to dialectically interconnect dimensions to produce a safe space at the village school to protect the students from climate disaster threats. A mix-method method is applied with several techniques to collect data, including participant observation, semi-structured interviews, and content analysis. Furthermore, a scale Likert survey examined statements on school safety from educational practitioners in the rural forest area. The research argues that the production of safe space at the school is intertwined with budget allocation for disaster preparedness and response (institutional issue as l'espace concu), environmental protection campaign to create a hygienic school environment (physical conditions as l'espace percu), and support from the local community (external relations as l'espace vecu). However, the school is also two contradicting spaces of conceived and lived. Through the critical examination of the production of safe space, the school is a planned space of hierarchical power relations in institutional issues focusing on impacts from rapid-onset disasters. 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引用次数: 2
摘要
这项研究是在位于Doi Mae Salong森林最高峰的山顶村庄Santikhiri进行的,气候变化增加了自然灾害的强度和频率,极大地影响了泰国北部清莱省山区的当地儿童。在这片森林景观中,只有一所中学,教育着大约900名来自不同山地部落少数民族的学生。本文考察了乡村学校作为气候灾害中森林儿童安全空间制造者的日常生活经验。学校安全是一个全球框架,认识到以儿童为中心的努力在教育部门建设抗灾能力方面的重要性。用于衡量学校抗灾能力的参数和变量改编自Tong等人(2012)的气候弹性模型和学校安全模型,涵盖三个维度:1)制度问题,2)物理条件,3)外部关系。Lefebvre的空间三元框架被应用于辩证地相互联系的维度,在乡村学校产生一个安全的空间,以保护学生免受气候灾害的威胁。采用混合方法收集数据,包括参与式观察、半结构化访谈和内容分析。此外,李克特量表调查检查了农村森林地区教育从业者对学校安全的陈述。研究认为,学校安全空间的生产与防灾和救灾的预算分配(制度问题称为l'espace concu)、创造卫生学校环境的环境保护运动(物理条件称为l'espace percu)以及当地社区的支持(外部关系称为l'espace vecu)交织在一起。然而,学校也是两个相互矛盾的构思和生活空间。通过对安全空间生产的批判性检查,学校是一个在制度问题中关注快速灾害影响的等级权力关系的规划空间。与此同时,森林儿童仍然被外部关系和自然条件缓慢发生的气候变化影响边缘化。
The Production of Safety School Space from Climate Disasters in Doi Mae Salong Forest, Upland Northern Thailand
This research is conducted in Santikhiri, a hilltop village on the highest peak in the Doi Mae Salong forest, where climate change increases the intensity and frequency of natural disasters that immensely affect the local children in the mountainous area in Chiang Rai province, northern Thailand. There is only one secondary-level school in this forest landscape educating around 900 schoolchildren from various minority hill-tribe ethnic groups. This paper examines everyday life experiences recentering the village school's role as the producer of safe space for the forest children from climate disasters. School safety is a global framework for recognizing the importance of child-centered efforts in building disaster resilience for the education sector. Parameters and variables used to measure the disaster resilience of schools are adapted from the Climate Resilience Model and School Safety Model by Tong et al. (2012), covering three dimensions: 1) institutional issues, 2) physical conditions, and 3) external relationships. Lefebvre's Spatial Triad Framework is applied to dialectically interconnect dimensions to produce a safe space at the village school to protect the students from climate disaster threats. A mix-method method is applied with several techniques to collect data, including participant observation, semi-structured interviews, and content analysis. Furthermore, a scale Likert survey examined statements on school safety from educational practitioners in the rural forest area. The research argues that the production of safe space at the school is intertwined with budget allocation for disaster preparedness and response (institutional issue as l'espace concu), environmental protection campaign to create a hygienic school environment (physical conditions as l'espace percu), and support from the local community (external relations as l'espace vecu). However, the school is also two contradicting spaces of conceived and lived. Through the critical examination of the production of safe space, the school is a planned space of hierarchical power relations in institutional issues focusing on impacts from rapid-onset disasters. Concurrently, the forest children are still marginalized from external relationships and natural conditions' slow-onset climate change impacts.