Increasingly the environment, and climate risks in particular, are influencing migration and planned resettlement in Vietnam, raising the spectre of increased displacement in a country already confronting serious challenges around sustainable land and water use as well as urbanisation. Planned resettlement has emerged as part of a suite of measures being pursued as part of disaster risk reduction and climate change adaptation strategies. This paper provides an historical, political, legal and environmental overview of resettlement in Vietnam identifying key challenges for framing resettlement as climate change adaptation. The paper outlines the scale of past resettlement in Vietnam, identifying the drivers and implications for vulnerability. Detailed case studies of resettlement are reviewed. Through this review, the paper reflects on the growing threat of climate change and the likelihood of increased displacement associated with worsening climate risks to identify some critical considerations for planned resettlement in climate change adaptation planning.
1.Macquarie Univ, Dept Geog & Planning, Sydney, NSW 2109, Australia 2.Univ Melbourne, Sch Geog, Melbourne, Vic 3010, Australia 3.Univ Wollongong, Sch Geog & Sustainable Communities, Wollongong, NSW 2522, Australia
Recommended Citation:
Miller, Fiona,Dun, Olivia. Resettlement and the environment in Vietnam: Implications for climate change adaptation planning[J]. ASIA PACIFIC VIEWPOINT,2019-01-01,60(2):132-147