© Ateneo de Manila University. The historiography of the Philippines has been largely bounded by the nation-state, which has defined how its past has been conceived and to whom its peoples are mainly compared. A more transnational environmental history, however, seeks to situate the archipelago within the context of the daily threats that its peoples have to face. This article focuses on the hazardous nature of living in the islands and explores the ways in which Filipinos have adapted to natural hazards as a frequent life experience over time
This essay is based on field research conducted in the summer of 2010 in the Philippines around the ...
The longer the time-depth considered, the more human history is dependent on thebeneficence of the p...
The importance of indigenous knowledge in reducing risk from disasters and natural calamities has be...
© Ateneo de Manila University. The historiography of the Philippines has been largely bounded by the...
Vient de paraître : Philippines Studies : historical and ethnographic viewpoints, vol. 64, no. 3-4 (...
This dissertation asserts historic natural hazards and the disasters they created are a potent and f...
By revisiting the eruptions of Taal in 1911, Hibok-Hibok in 1951, and Pinatubo in 1991, this article...
The Ati peoples, known for their nomadic culture and knowledge on traditional medicine are precariou...
Local Adaptation, Resilience & Interpretation of socio-natural hazards, and environment management i...
The Philippines is one of the most disaster-prone countries in the world, with over 7,107 islands of...
The Ibaloi and Kankanaey gold miners in Itogon, Benguet (Cordillera, Luzon) and the Ivatan fishermen...
Rich volcanic soils have long attracted human settlements, which have traded the risk of eruption ag...
The Philippines is a large archipelago of over 7000 islands, mostly lined by coral reefs, seagrass m...
This paper examines the place attachment of residents living in landslide-prone areas in Los Baños, ...
In the Roman Catholic Diocese of Maasin, on the island of Leyte, Philippines, there remain today sev...
This essay is based on field research conducted in the summer of 2010 in the Philippines around the ...
The longer the time-depth considered, the more human history is dependent on thebeneficence of the p...
The importance of indigenous knowledge in reducing risk from disasters and natural calamities has be...
© Ateneo de Manila University. The historiography of the Philippines has been largely bounded by the...
Vient de paraître : Philippines Studies : historical and ethnographic viewpoints, vol. 64, no. 3-4 (...
This dissertation asserts historic natural hazards and the disasters they created are a potent and f...
By revisiting the eruptions of Taal in 1911, Hibok-Hibok in 1951, and Pinatubo in 1991, this article...
The Ati peoples, known for their nomadic culture and knowledge on traditional medicine are precariou...
Local Adaptation, Resilience & Interpretation of socio-natural hazards, and environment management i...
The Philippines is one of the most disaster-prone countries in the world, with over 7,107 islands of...
The Ibaloi and Kankanaey gold miners in Itogon, Benguet (Cordillera, Luzon) and the Ivatan fishermen...
Rich volcanic soils have long attracted human settlements, which have traded the risk of eruption ag...
The Philippines is a large archipelago of over 7000 islands, mostly lined by coral reefs, seagrass m...
This paper examines the place attachment of residents living in landslide-prone areas in Los Baños, ...
In the Roman Catholic Diocese of Maasin, on the island of Leyte, Philippines, there remain today sev...
This essay is based on field research conducted in the summer of 2010 in the Philippines around the ...
The longer the time-depth considered, the more human history is dependent on thebeneficence of the p...
The importance of indigenous knowledge in reducing risk from disasters and natural calamities has be...