Artigo Acesso aberto Revisado por pares

The impact of legal vulnerability on environmental inequalities. A case study of coastal populations in Guadeloupe (French Antilles)

2017; Elsevier BV; Volume: 349; Issue: 6-7 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1016/j.crte.2017.09.006

ISSN

1778-7025

Autores

Cécilia Claeys, Aurélie Arnaud, Marie-Laure Lambert,

Tópico(s)

French Urban and Social Studies

Resumo

This paper draws on sociology, geography and law to analyse the exposure of populations to coastal multihazards in a postcolonial and overseas context. The research is based on a case study conducted in two municipalities in Guadeloupe (French Antilles): Deshaies and Capesterre-Belle-Eau. The corpus of data consists of 52 interviews conducted with inhabitants and institutional actors, as well as a set of spatialized data and a regulatory corpus. The analysis underscores how public policies must contend with a complex territorial reality that is still bound to the postcolonial past and legacy of slavery in Guadeloupe. The potential contradictions between regularization policies, hazard prevention policies and policies to curb insalubrious housing tend to expose the most fragile populations to what we refer to here as legal vulnerability.

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