Author
Listed:
- Nina Laurie
- Andrew C. G. Henderson
- Rodolfo Rodríguez Arismendiz
- Oliver Calle
- Daniel Clayton
- Andrew J. Russell
Abstract
In 2017 El Niño Costero devastated the northern coast of Peru. This article seeks to learn from this experience for future large central and eastern Pacific-driven El Niño events. It directs attention away from dominant disaster narratives to reflect on the opportunities that El Niño rains have generated for desert livelihoods over time. We make a call for and set out the key elements of a historical geographical ethnography approach in environmental geography, which, as well as examining climate dimensions (paleoclimatology, dendrochronological, and atmospheric changes) of El Niño, also aims to consider its impacts on the livelihoods and management strategies of desert communities over time. We take as a starting point the responses of people who themselves come directly into contact with environmental change, yet whose agency and experiences are often marginal in knowledge production about El Niño. Responding to recent calls for qualitative geography researchers to be more explicit about how data are collected and analyzed, we explain how and why it is important to compare stakeholder interviews and climate records with newspaper archives and community memories of the 1983 and 1998 El Niño events. We illustrate that for desert populations in northern Peru, El Niño can represent abundance as well as disaster and make visible their role in managing change after El Niño flooding.
Suggested Citation
Nina Laurie & Andrew C. G. Henderson & Rodolfo Rodríguez Arismendiz & Oliver Calle & Daniel Clayton & Andrew J. Russell, 2024.
"For an Environmental Ethnography in Human and Physical Geography: Reenvisioning the Impacts and Opportunities of El Niño in Peru,"
Annals of the American Association of Geographers, Taylor & Francis Journals, vol. 114(10), pages 2240-2263, November.
Handle:
RePEc:taf:raagxx:v:114:y:2024:i:10:p:2240-2263
DOI: 10.1080/24694452.2024.2377222
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