3,376 results
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2. Response to the paper by Sara Pantuliano.
- Author
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Herson M
- Subjects
- Disasters, Humans, Sudan, Altruism, Food Supply, Income, International Cooperation, Relief Work
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. An analytical framework for household entitlement assessment in civil war.
- Author
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Arya, Aziz, Ihle, Rico, and Heijman, Wim
- Subjects
CIVIL war ,INTERVENTION (International law) ,HOUSEHOLDS ,HUMANITARIAN intervention - Abstract
Copyright of Disasters is the property of Wiley-Blackwell and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. The mechanism of disaster capitalism and the failure to build community resilience
- Author
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Angelo Jonas Imperiale, Frank Vanclay, and Urban and Regional Studies Institute
- Subjects
Paper ,Elite capture ,010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciences ,Civil defense ,Disaster risk reduction ,media_common.quotation_subject ,0211 other engineering and technologies ,Disaster Planning ,02 engineering and technology ,Capitalism ,Public administration ,01 natural sciences ,disaster risk governance ,Disasters ,Political science ,Earthquakes ,Humans ,organised crime infiltration ,social dimensions of disasters ,Sociology of disasters ,elite capture ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences ,media_common ,021110 strategic, defence & security studies ,Government ,Community resilience ,Human rights ,Emergency management ,business.industry ,Social dimensions of disaster ,General Social Sciences ,Disaster management ,transformation towards sustainability ,Resilience (organizational) ,Disaster capitalism ,disaster governance ,social learning ,rent‐seeking ,Italy ,Papers ,General Earth and Planetary Sciences ,business - Abstract
This paper reflects on what materialised during recovery operations following the earthquake in L'Aquila, Italy, on 6 April 2009. Previous critiques have focused on the actions of the Government of Italy and the Department of Civil Protection (Protezione Civile), with little attention paid to the role of local authorities. This analysis sheds light on how the latter used emergency powers, the command-and-control approach, and top-down planning to manage the disaster context, especially in terms of removal of rubble, implementing safety measures, and allocating temporary accommodation. It discusses how these arrangements constituted the mechanism via which ‘disaster capitalism’ took hold at the local and national level, and how it violated human rights, produced environmental and social impacts, hindered local communities from learning, transforming, and building resilience, and facilitated disaster capitalism and corruption. To make the disaster risk reduction and resilience paradigm more effective, a shift from centralised civil protection to decentralised, inclusive community empowerment systems is needed.
- Published
- 2021
5. Evaluator perceptions of NGO performance in disasters
- Author
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Fernando Nieto Morales, Rafael Wittek, Liesbet Heyse, and Sociology/ICS
- Subjects
Paper ,ORGANIZATIONS ,010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciences ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Control (management) ,non‐profit organisation ,0211 other engineering and technologies ,Beneficiary ,02 engineering and technology ,COMPETING VALUES ,01 natural sciences ,Disasters ,Perception ,Natural hazard ,Humans ,non-profit organisation ,project performance ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences ,media_common ,HUMAN-RESOURCE MANAGEMENT ,021110 strategic, defence & security studies ,COMPLEXITY ,governance structures ,Qualitative comparative analysis ,Humanitarian aid ,business.industry ,General Social Sciences ,Flexibility (personality) ,Public relations ,Relief Work ,humanitarian crises ,organisational paradox ,RELIEF ,Human resource management ,PARADOX ,Papers ,humanitarian aid ,General Earth and Planetary Sciences ,Business ,non‐governmental organisation (NGO) ,non-governmental organisation (NGO) ,Program Evaluation - Abstract
Providing aid in times of increasing humanitarian need, limited budgets, and mounting security risks is challenging. This paper explores in what organisational circumstances evaluators judge, positively and negatively, the performance of international non-governmental organisations (INGOs) in response to disasters triggered by natural hazards. It assesses whether and how, as perceived by expert evaluators, CARE and Oxfam successfully met multiple institutional requirements concerning beneficiary needs and organisational demands. It utilises the Competing Values Framework to analyse evaluator statements about project performance and organisational control and flexibility issues, using seven CARE and four Oxfam evaluation reports from 2005-11. The reports are compared using fuzzy-set Qualitative Comparative Analysis. The resulting configurations show that positive evaluations of an INGO's internal and external flexibility relate to satisfying beneficiary needs and organisational demands, whereas negative evaluations of external flexibility pertain to not meeting beneficiary needs and negative statements about internal control concerning not fulfilling organisational demands.
- Published
- 2021
6. Corruption and disasters in the built environment: a literature review.
- Author
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Sanderson, David, Patel, Sonny S., Loosemore, Martin, Sharma, Anshu, Gleason, Kelsey, and Patel, Ronak
- Subjects
BUILT environment ,EMERGENCY management ,CORRUPTION ,BUILDING failures ,DISASTERS ,NATURAL disasters - Abstract
Copyright of Disasters is the property of Wiley-Blackwell and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. Livelihoods, conflict and aid programming: is the evidence base good enough?
- Author
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Mallett, Richard and Slater, Rachel
- Subjects
SOCIAL conflict ,DISASTER relief ,COMPUTER programming ,PUBLIC welfare ,PEACEBUILDING - Abstract
In conflict-affected situations, aid-funded livelihood interventions are often tasked with a dual imperative: to generate material welfare benefits and to contribute to peacebuilding outcomes. There may be some logic to such a transformative agenda, but does the reality square with the rhetoric? Through a review of the effectiveness of a range of livelihood promotion interventions-from job creation to microfinance-this paper finds that high quality empirical evidence is hard to come by in conflict-affected situations. Many evaluations appear to conflate outputs with impacts and numerous studies fail to include adequate information on their methodologies and datasets, making it difficult to appraise the reliability of their conclusions. Given the primary purpose of this literature-to provide policy guidance on effective ways to promote livelihoods-this silence is particularly concerning. As such, there is a strong case to be made for a restrained and nuanced handling of such interventions in conflict-affected settings. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. Building resilience from the ground up
- Author
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Caroline King‐Okumu and Emily Wilkinson
- Subjects
Paper ,Economic growth ,010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciences ,Economics ,media_common.quotation_subject ,0211 other engineering and technologies ,Public policy ,02 engineering and technology ,01 natural sciences ,Ecology and Environment ,Meteorology and Climatology ,Political science ,Agency (sociology) ,Agricultural extension ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences ,media_common ,021110 strategic, defence & security studies ,Extreme poverty ,General Social Sciences ,Monitoring and evaluation ,Social protection ,Papers ,General Earth and Planetary Sciences ,Psychological resilience ,Hydrology ,International development - Abstract
Climate extremes and longer‐term climate change impacts threaten the achievement of development goals (Damania et al., 2017; IBRD, 2018). In 2030, up to 319 million extremely poor people will be living in the 45 countries most exposed to floods, droughts and heat extremes (Shepherd et al., 2013). According to the recent Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change report on 1.5°C global warming, a 2°C increase in temperature will double 1 the number of people exposed to drought through water stress (IPCC, 2018). To eradicate extreme poverty by 2030, development cooperation and domestic action in the developing world is increasingly concerned with building resilience to these climate hazards (SDG Goal 1.5). Amid lively critical debates, the resilience‐building agenda has sparked a proliferation of projects in recent years. Resilience programmes are being implemented in some of the most climate‐vulnerable, institutionally fragile and unstable settings around the world. Often, they focus on improving people's access to climate and weather information, resources or markets, helping them plan ahead and navigate environmental change and uncertainty in the future. Importantly, resilience‐building is anticipated to give greater agency to vulnerable people and produce more co‐benefits or ‘dividends’ than conventional international development approaches (Rodin, 2014; Tanner et al., 2015a, 2015b; Bond et al., 2017; Cabot Venton, 2018; Cabot Venton et al., 2012). Building resilience from the ground up is critical because of the context‐specific nature of climate change and disaster impacts and the need to ensure the engagement of vulnerable groups. The five‐year, £100m UK Department for International Development (DFID) programme on Building Resilience and Adaptation to Climate Extremes and Disasters (BRACED) is one example of this intervention logic. Alongside the implementation of 15 projects in 13 countries, research and monitoring and evaluation, knowledge‐sharing activities that have taken place under BRACED present a unique opportunity to learn about how poor people and communities deal with climate shocks and other hazards in different contexts, their vulnerabilities and the kinds of interventions that can help strengthen their resilience. Similarly, the Action on Climate Today (ACT) programme funded by DFID for five years to provide technical and financial support to governments across five South Asian countries had a lesson‐learning function to share experiences and knowledge across the programme and with the outside world. This special issue of Disasters reflects on resilience‐building supported via BRACED and ACT in some of the world's most climate‐vulnerable countries and contexts. These programmes have focused on scaling up action to build resilience, 2 principally through the expansion and replication of good practices by influencing government policies, plans and investments. The papers provide insights that are each grounded in different contexts and understandings of local realities and the factors that support and undermine people's resilience. The BRACED articles emphasise the importance of this ground‐level engagement. They also highlight a range of different opportunities for intervening in the broader social structures and decision‐making processes that shape these local realities. The focus of the ACT article is explicitly and exclusively concerned with national and local government policy‐making and how this can be influenced. Each of the seven papers selected for this special issue was written by teams of researchers and practitioners engaged in the BRACED and ACT programmes, based in the Global South and North in a range of country contexts from the Sahel to Southeast Asia. Each brings a different perspective on the significance and operationalisation of efforts to build resilience to climate extremes and disasters. The contributing authors describe resilience‐building at different scales, for different types of projects and interventions: from gender‐differentiated perspectives within households in Ethiopia, Burkina Faso and Chad (Le Masson et al., 2019; McOmber et al., 2019), to devolved community planning and financing in Mali and Senegal (Beauchamp et al., 2019); from sector‐wide agricultural extension support in Sudan (Young and Ismail, 2019), to early warning systems in Ethiopia and Nicaragua (Ewbank et al., 2019), national social protection programmes in Ethiopia (Ulrichs et al., 2019) and advocacy for mainstreaming into government policy in South Asia (Tanner et al., 2019). It is important to understand that the projects of the BRACED and ACT programmes, which inspired the articles in this special issue, did not and could not invest in long‐term studies of the kind that could test the hypotheses of the resilience‐building programmes – that, through these sets of interventions, people's resilience could be enhanced and hence the negative impact of climate extremes and longer‐term climate change be reduced. This was because of the brief implementation time frames of both programmes. This is a common challenge with project‐based interventions, where the assessment of potential impacts needs to be done simultaneously with the investments intended to achieve these impacts. As such, these articles are not based on routine evidence of results produced through monitoring, learning and evaluation activities, but rather are selected expert reflections on the projects. They are intended for scientific peer review and journal publication, not project evaluation. The articles present rich and detailed descriptions and reflections from their respective fields and contexts, which we do not exhaustively or definitively summarise in this overview. Rather, this overview paper aims to gently pique the curiosity of readers, and to reflect briefly on the critical questions that the articles help address, which have hereto remain largely unresolved in resilience debates. We select and draw out insights from this special issue that feed into these debates, and highlight their significance for the wider community of humanitarian and development practitioners. Following a brief overview of how the term ‘resilience’ is being used in each of the articles, we then examine how each has approached the challenge of understanding and measuring bottom‐up interventions. We consider the multiple benefits or resilience dividends that make some of these projects unique, and reflect on what the authors consider are the prospects for effecting deeper structural, or transformative changes.
- Published
- 2019
9. Assessing the cost‐effectiveness of interventions within a humanitarian organisation
- Author
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Chloe Puett
- Subjects
Paper ,010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciences ,Cost effectiveness ,cost‐effectiveness analysis ,Cost-Benefit Analysis ,0211 other engineering and technologies ,Psychological intervention ,Poison control ,02 engineering and technology ,01 natural sciences ,Suicide prevention ,Humans ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences ,021110 strategic, defence & security studies ,business.industry ,General Social Sciences ,Human factors and ergonomics ,value for money ,Cost-effectiveness analysis ,Public relations ,Relief Work ,Comprehension ,Action (philosophy) ,Papers ,humanitarian interventions ,General Earth and Planetary Sciences ,business - Abstract
Cost-effectiveness analysis is increasingly relevant in humanitarian action. The cost of response has increased exponentially in the past decade, alongside concurrent donor budget restrictions. However, there remains limited comprehension and application of these methods in this field. This paper documents methods developed for use within Action Against Hunger, an international humanitarian organisation, in response to a lack of understanding of this topic within the humanitarian community and limited evidence of the cost-effectiveness of humanitarian action. These methods encompass costs to both implementing institutions and participating communities. Activity-based cost analyses are conducted to assess resources per programme activity. Cost-effectiveness is evaluated using successful programme outcomes, and uncertainty is appraised via sensitivity analysis. This paper aims to advance knowledge, stimulate discussion, and promote the adoption of cost-effectiveness methods for building the evidence base for humanitarian action, including consideration of community costs, to enable analytical outputs that are useful for managers and policymakers alike.
- Published
- 2019
10. Disasters and the diminishing of women's economic empowerment.
- Author
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Kreutzer, Willow, Millerd, Carly, and Timbs, Nathan
- Subjects
SELF-efficacy ,ECONOMIC liberty ,BURDEN of care ,DISASTERS ,ECONOMIC opportunities - Abstract
Copyright of Disasters is the property of Wiley-Blackwell and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
11. Corporate sector engagement in contemporary 'crises': the case of refugee integration in Germany.
- Author
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Müller, Tanja R.
- Subjects
REFUGEE children ,REFUGEES ,INSTITUTIONAL logic ,CORPORATION reports ,SOCIAL responsibility of business ,SUSTAINABLE development - Abstract
Copyright of Disasters is the property of Wiley-Blackwell and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
12. Fighting with words: humanitarian security and the changing role of law in contemporary armed conflict.
- Author
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Tammi, Iida‐Maria
- Subjects
WAR (International law) ,WAR ,HUMANITARIAN law ,CIVIL defense ,PHILANTHROPISTS - Abstract
Copyright of Disasters is the property of Wiley-Blackwell and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
13. The 'conflict paradox': humanitarian access, localisation, and (dis)empowerment in Myanmar, Somalia, and Somaliland.
- Author
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Barter, Dustin and Sumlut, Gun Mai
- Subjects
WAR ,HUMANITARIAN assistance ,SELF-efficacy ,PARADOX ,DECOLONIZATION - Abstract
Copyright of Disasters is the property of Wiley-Blackwell and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
14. Food systems in protracted crises: examining indigenous food sovereignty amid de‐development in Kashmir.
- Author
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Tak, Mehroosh, Hussain, Sardar Babur, Zargar, Haris, and Blake, Lauren J.
- Abstract
How do protracted crises shape indigenous food systems, and what are their ramifications for food and nutritional security? Building on decolonial and interdisciplinary research approaches, this paper assesses the consequences of militarised violence for Kashmir's food system. We document the impact of settler‐colonialism and conflict‐induced agrarian changes on delocalisation of diets. The protracted nature of the crises has two key implications for changes in dietary patterns. First, land control over common land dispossesses the local population and hinders food production. Second, disenfranchisement from (agricultural) land has led to increased reliance on markets that are flooded by imported foods as local production declines. The paper argues that the state plays an important role in food system changes by destroying local patterns of food production and consumption. Slow violence and agrarian de‐development serve as tools to de‐develop the local food system. Indigenous food cultures form part of everyday resistance and resilience that are operationalised as mitigation and adaptation strategies to address food insecurity. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
15. Hurricanes, reconstruction, and resistance: thinking through vulnerability in the Caribbean.
- Author
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Aparicio Cuervo, Juan Ricardo and Macías Perdomo, Laura Victoria
- Subjects
- *
HURRICANES , *ARCHIPELAGOES , *ARCHIVAL research , *NEGOTIATION , *ISLANDS - Abstract
This paper critically analyses events that surrounded the reconstruction of the Colombian archipelago of San Andrés, Providencia, and Santa Catalina islands after Hurricane Iota struck in 2020. Discussing the historical‐structural and conjunctural dimensions within which the archipelago's history, various hurricanes, and reconstructions must be set, this paper draws on two theoretical conversations from Latin American and Caribbean critical thought and the critical humanitarian field that understand humanitarian governance as an ‘arena of dispute’. Through mainly archival research of different sources, this paper assesses reconstruction and what it laid bare: structural vulnerability largely produced by the long lasting coloniality of power. In addition, it describes the active mediations and negotiations and the plethora of actions and repertoires in response to these centralised plans. Ultimately, we offer a vision whereby what is negotiated concerns not only the priorities and directions of the reconstruction, but also the design of a different future for the islands. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
16. Music and the politics of famine: everyday discourses and shame for suffering.
- Author
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Pendle, Naomi and Akoi, Abraham Diing
- Subjects
- *
POPULAR music , *WAR , *ETHNOLOGY research , *POLITICAL science , *POLITICAL debates - Abstract
Understanding the politics of famine is crucial to understanding why famines still occur. A key part of this is how famine is remembered, understood, and discussed. This paper focuses on songs popular among communities that have recently experienced deadly famine. Contemporary famines almost always manifest in armed conflict contexts, where there is limited political freedom. Here, songs and music can be an important way to debate sensitive political issues. This paper focuses on the way that songs and music shape ‘regimes of truth’ around famine, and who is shamed and held accountable for associated suffering. It is based on long‐term ethnographic research, the recordings of famine‐related songs, and collaborative analysis in Jonglei and Warrap States (South Sudan) in 2021–24. The paper shows how songs can mock soldiers for their seizing of assets during times of hunger and how they can create familial shame for famine suffering, shifting responsibility away from the real causes to family members. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
17. Hunger in global war economies: understanding the decline and return of famines.
- Author
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Waal, Alex
- Subjects
- *
ECONOMICS of war , *WORLD hunger , *FOOD security , *COUNTERINSURGENCY , *INTERNATIONAL organization - Abstract
The resurgence of famines is a topic of concern. This paper explains the recent trajectory using the framework of contending ‘global war economies’. It characterises the unipolar neoliberal world order era (1986–2015) as the ‘Pax Americana’ war economy, focusing on the United States dollar's roles. These were the decades of the liberal imperium, the corporate food regime, and counterinsurgent coalitions, which generated structural vulnerability to food crises and reduced the actual incidence and lethality of famine. The paper characterises the subsequent period (2016 onwards) as the challenge of the BRICS club, focusing on its efforts to rewrite the global political economy's rules, proactively hedging among diversifying currency regimes. This entails a scramble to secure strategic commodities and infrastructure in subaltern countries, which is intensifying conflict and food insecurity, and revising international norms in favour of reasserting sovereign rights. The global political–economic contestation and, especially, the associated normative regression are permissive of political and military triggers of famine. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
18. Interplay between sanctions, donor conditionality, and food insecurity in complex emergencies: the case of Syria.
- Author
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Kanfash, Mohammad
- Subjects
- *
SYRIANS , *FOOD security , *STARVATION , *CRISES , *COUNTRIES - Abstract
Thirteen years into conflict, Syria remains one of the world's major humanitarian crises. Food insecurity has reached unprecedented levels in the country, with millions of civilians facing starvation and hunger. The key drivers of this are conflict‐related, nature‐induced, and, importantly, man‐made policies. Semi‐comprehensive sanctions against the country and donor conditionality vis‐à‐vis humanitarian operators' work are prime examples of the latter. These policies are inextricably linked with food insecurity in Syria and have direct and indirect impacts on it. Understanding the ongoing crisis as a complex emergency, this paper examines the interplay between sanctions, donor conditionality, and food insecurity, an understudied subject in the Syrian context. It explores how sanctions and donor conditionality influence three key dimensions of food security, namely, availability, affordability and economic access, and utilisation, and subsequently worsen the conditions confronting the Syrian population. The paper contributes to discussions on food security in conflict settings and how sanctions negatively affect civilians in targeted countries. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
19. Community‐centred disaster recovery: A call to change the narrative.
- Author
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Sanderson, David, Heffernan, Tim, DeSisto, Marco, and Shearing, Clifford
- Subjects
- *
INTERNET surveys , *DISASTERS , *GOLD , *SUCCESS , *CULTURE - Abstract
This paper challenges current approaches to undertaking community‐centred disaster recovery. Community‐centred approaches are widely recognised as ‘the gold standard’ for effective recovery from disasters. Yet, they are rarely applied well enough in practice. Challenges include the ‘authority’ culture of command‐and‐control agencies, the emphasis on discrete recovery time frames, and the reluctance to relinquish centralised control. The paper focuses on people's experiences of community‐centred recovery in New South Wales, Australia, which has experienced severe fires and floods since 2019. We undertook key informant interviews and an online survey to inquire into how community‐centred recovery is enacted. Our work uncovered widespread dissatisfaction with current practices. The paper discusses key themes emerging from the research and ends with a call to change how community‐centred recovery is framed and conducted by responding organisations, to include the underlying causes of vulnerability in recovery, to measure success differently, and to alter the narrative of who ‘owns’ disasters. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
20. How violence against women and girls undermines resilience to climate risks in Chad
- Author
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Giselle Bernard, Sandra Sotelo Reyes, Colette Benoudji, and Virginie Le Masson
- Subjects
Adult ,Risk ,Paper ,Economic growth ,Adolescent ,Chad ,010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciences ,Climate Change ,media_common.quotation_subject ,0211 other engineering and technologies ,02 engineering and technology ,Violence ,Affect (psychology) ,01 natural sciences ,Young Adult ,Politics ,Political science ,Humans ,Survivors ,Empirical evidence ,resilience ,gender equality ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences ,media_common ,021110 strategic, defence & security studies ,Gender equality ,Community level ,gender‐based violence ,General Social Sciences ,Middle Aged ,Resilience, Psychological ,Livelihood ,Papers ,General Earth and Planetary Sciences ,Female ,Psychological resilience ,risks ,Climate extremes - Abstract
What consequences does ‘everyday violence’ have on the abilities of survivors to protect themselves from further risks? This paper seeks to establish the linkages between violence and people's resilience capacities to survive and adapt to environmental changes, particularly those living in fragile economic and political contexts such as Chad. It investigates not only how the adverse consequences of violence against women and girls affect the health status and livelihoods of survivors, but also their capacities, and those of their household and community members, to further protect themselves from other risks. Empirical evidence collected in Chad as part of the BRACED (Building Resilience and Adaptation to Climate Extremes and Disasters) programme shows that ‘everyday violence’ undermines resilience‐building at the individual, household, and community level. These results have serious implications for development programmes and the role they need to play to better promote both gender equality and resilience to shocks and stresses.
- Published
- 2019
21. The Protection of Civilians and ethics of humanitarian governance: beyond intervention and resilience
- Author
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Kristoffer Lidén
- Subjects
Paper ,Warfare ,Public administration ,humanitarianism ,Political science ,Humans ,South Sudan ,intervention ,Internationalism (politics) ,Corporate governance ,Politics ,General Social Sciences ,Humanitarian intervention ,protection ,Relief Work ,Global governance ,ethics ,global governance ,Military Personnel ,Pluralism (political theory) ,solidarism ,Papers ,General Earth and Planetary Sciences ,Development aid ,pluralism ,Complicity ,Peacekeeping - Abstract
The principle of the Protection of Civilians (PoC) in armed conflict has ethical repercussions in various actions undertaken by states and international organisations, from humanitarian relief, development aid, and peacekeeping, to warfare and military intervention. While the ethics of humanitarian intervention are instructive in this regard, most PoC practices should be conceived rather as modes of humanitarian governance across borders-from interventionist to resilience-oriented kinds. The consequences of this for the ethics of PoC are explored in this paper, highlighting questions of power, culture, and complicity. By relating these questions to the ethical strands of solidarist and pluralist internationalism, it positions the ethics of PoC within the broader field of the ethics of world politics. Examples are drawn from recent scholarly debate on PoC efforts in war-torn countries such as South Sudan. This analysis of the ethics of PoC reconfigures central positions in the debate on humanitarian intervention to an era of global humanitarian governance.
- Published
- 2019
22. Enhancing the resilience and well‐being of rural poor to climate risks: are the economic functions of social protection enough?
- Author
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Kundo, Hare Krisna, Brueckner, Martin, Spencer, Rochelle, and Davis, John K.
- Subjects
RURAL poor ,WELL-being ,SOCIAL skills ,CLIMATE change ,RURAL geography - Abstract
Copyright of Disasters is the property of Wiley-Blackwell and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. Negotiating humanitarian space with criminal armed groups in urban Latin America.
- Author
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Lucchi, Elena and Schuberth, Moritz
- Subjects
COMMUNITIES ,PHILANTHROPISTS ,CITIES & towns ,CRIMINALS ,TRUST - Abstract
Copyright of Disasters is the property of Wiley-Blackwell and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. The policy landscape and challenges of disaster risk financing: navigating risk and uncertainty.
- Author
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Taylor, Olivia G.
- Subjects
FINANCIAL risk ,EMERGENCY management ,DISASTERS ,COMMUNITIES ,EXPECTATION (Psychology) - Abstract
Copyright of Disasters is the property of Wiley-Blackwell and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. Disaster preparedness and cultural factors: a comparative study in Romania and Malta
- Author
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Sandra Appleby-Arnold, Sunčica Zdravković, Ivana Jakovljev, Noellie Brockdorff, and University of St Andrews. University of St Andrews
- Subjects
Community cohesion ,Paper ,010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciences ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Culture ,0211 other engineering and technologies ,Exploratory research ,Poison control ,Social Sciences(all) ,Earth and Planetary Sciences(all) ,Qualitative property ,Disaster Planning ,02 engineering and technology ,Trust ,01 natural sciences ,Political science ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,Citizen Summits ,Humans ,Social media ,community cohesion ,Disaster preparedness ,disaster preparedness ,readiness ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences ,media_common ,021110 strategic, defence & security studies ,Cultural Characteristics ,Distrust ,business.industry ,Malta ,Romania ,General Social Sciences ,trust ,Public relations ,NIS ,Focus Groups ,Focus group ,culture ,Readiness ,Preparedness ,Papers ,General Earth and Planetary Sciences ,business - Abstract
The research reported in this paper was carried out as part of the CARISMAND project, which has received funding from the European Union's Horizon 2020 Research and Innovation Programme (2014–20), Grant Agreement Number 653748. This exploratory study investigates the relationships between the disaster preparedness of citizens and cultural factors in Romania and Malta. With regard to methodology, quantitative and qualitative data were collected during two Citizen Summits, which consisted of a real-time survey and focus group discussions. The results point to two specific cultural factors that may bridge this ‘gap’ and be operationalised to enhance people's readiness for a disaster event. In Malta, the findings reveal how community cohesion is altered from a personal to a cultural value, which has the potential to encourage the transformation of preparedness intentions into actual preparedness behaviour. In Romania, meanwhile, the findings highlight the ambivalent aspects of trusting behaviour as a cultural norm on the one hand, and distrust in authorities based on experience and unmet expectations on the other hand. Social media use may reduce this tension between trust and distrust, and thus foster successful disaster risk-related communication. Publisher PDF
- Published
- 2020
26. Capital assets framework for analysing household vulnerability during disaster
- Author
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Huafeng Zhang, Jon Pedersen, and Yandong Zhao
- Subjects
Paper ,Coping (psychology) ,China ,010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciences ,household vulnerability ,Population ,0211 other engineering and technologies ,Poison control ,02 engineering and technology ,capital assets ,01 natural sciences ,Vulnerable Populations ,Disasters ,Earthquakes ,Humans ,education ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences ,021110 strategic, defence & security studies ,education.field_of_study ,Family Characteristics ,Public economics ,Poverty ,disaster assessment ,General Social Sciences ,Livelihood ,Socioeconomic Factors ,Wenchuan earthquake ,Papers ,General Earth and Planetary Sciences ,Capital asset ,Residence ,Business ,Social capital - Abstract
This paper examines the vulnerability of households to disasters, using an asset vulnerability framework to represent livelihoods. Such frameworks are widely employed to analyse household poverty and focus on living conditions and well-being rather than money-metric measures of consumption and income. The conceptualisation of household vulnerability is a challenge in current studies on coping with disasters. The paper considers whether a capital assets framework is useful in identifying and assessing household vulnerability in the context of the Wenchuan earthquake in China in 2008. The framework has five categories of assets (financial, human, natural, physical, and social capital) and attempts to measure the resilience and vulnerability of households. When applied to a major disaster, asset-based methods face the problem of heterogeneity of the population, such as with regard to livelihood type or residence. Moreover, the effect of external interventions, such as the provision of relief assistance, must be taken into account.
- Published
- 2019
27. Looking forward: Disasters at 40
- Author
-
Elena Fiddian-Qasmiyeh
- Subjects
Paper ,010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciences ,Refugee ,0211 other engineering and technologies ,overlapping displacement ,02 engineering and technology ,migration ,01 natural sciences ,Disasters ,interdisciplinarity ,localisation of aid ,long‐term responses to disasters ,Political science ,11. Sustainability ,Humans ,Resilience (network) ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences ,Intersectionality ,021110 strategic, defence & security studies ,Middle East ,Research ,refugee‐led response ,General Social Sciences ,Local community ,Forced migration ,Paradigm shift ,Political economy ,Papers ,South–South cooperation ,General Earth and Planetary Sciences ,intersectionality ,Forecasting - Abstract
This paper reflects on contemporary studies of and responses to disasters, highlighting the importance of historical, spatial, and intersectional modes of analysis, and draws on the author's ongoing research on Southern‐led and local community responses to displacement in the Middle East. Acknowledging the plurality of ‘international communities of response’, it begins by critiquing the depiction of selected responses to disasters as ‘positive’ ‘paradigm shifts’, including in reference to the ‘localisation of aid, and the United Nations’ Regional Refugee and Resilience Plan for Syria. Next it turns to three key themes that are central to disasters studies: migration; forced displacement; and Southern‐led responses to disasters. Among other things, the paper argues that exploring the principles and modalities of South–South cooperation, rather than promoting the incorporation of Southern actors into the ‘international humanitarian system’ via the localisation agenda, presents a critical opportunity for studies of and responses to disasters.
- Published
- 2019
28. Pinning down social vulnerability in Sindh Province, Pakistan: from narratives to numbers, and back again
- Author
-
Nadeem Ahmed, Meher Noshirwani, Giovanna Gioli, Manzoor Hussain Memon, Iffat Idris, and Daanish Mustafa
- Subjects
Paper ,Adult ,Male ,010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciences ,Climate Change ,vulnerability ,0211 other engineering and technologies ,Vulnerability ,02 engineering and technology ,01 natural sciences ,Vulnerable Populations ,Disasters ,political economic factors ,Vulnerability assessment ,Development economics ,vulnerabilities and capacities index ,gender ,Humans ,Narrative ,Pakistan ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences ,021110 strategic, defence & security studies ,Sindh ,Narration ,Poverty ,Comparability ,General Social Sciences ,Livelihood ,Geography ,Socioeconomic Factors ,Scale (social sciences) ,Papers ,General Earth and Planetary Sciences ,Female ,Social vulnerability - Abstract
This paper reflects critically on the results of a vulnerability assessment process at the household and community scale using a quantitative vulnerabilities and capacities index. It validates a methodology for a social vulnerability assessment at the local scale in 62 villages across four agro-ecological/livelihood zones in Sindh Province, Pakistan. The study finds that the move from vulnerability narratives to numbers improves the comparability and communicational strength of the concept. The depth and nuance of vulnerability, however, can be realised only by a return to narrative. Caution is needed, therefore: the index can be used in conjunction with qualitative assessments, but not instead of them. More substantively, the results show that vulnerability is more a function of historico-political economic factors and cultural ethos than any biophysical changes wrought by climate. The emerging gendered vulnerability picture revealed extremes of poverty and a lack of capacity to cope with contemporary environmental and social stresses.
- Published
- 2018
29. Localisation in the balance: Syrian medical‐humanitarian NGOs' strategic engagement with the local and international.
- Author
-
Roborgh, Sophie
- Subjects
NONGOVERNMENTAL organizations - Abstract
Copyright of Disasters is the property of Wiley-Blackwell and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. Assessing the impact of household participation on satisfaction and safe design in humanitarian shelter projects
- Author
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Aaron Opdyke, Amy Javernick-Will, and Matthew A. Koschmann
- Subjects
Paper ,010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciences ,shelter ,Philippines ,media_common.quotation_subject ,0211 other engineering and technologies ,Personal Satisfaction ,02 engineering and technology ,090502 - Construction Engineering [FoR] ,01 natural sciences ,Blame ,Emergency Shelter ,participation ,Humans ,Sociology ,housing ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences ,media_common ,Family Characteristics ,021110 strategic, defence & security studies ,Qualitative comparative analysis ,business.industry ,Community Participation ,General Social Sciences ,Public relations ,Relief Work ,Design phase ,qualitative comparative analysis ,Facility Design and Construction ,Papers ,Typhoon Haiyan ,General Earth and Planetary Sciences ,Safety ,120201 - Building Construction Management and Project Planning [FoR] ,business ,Program Evaluation - Abstract
Participation has long been considered important for post‐disaster recovery. Establishing what constitutes participation in post‐disaster shelter projects, however, has remained elusive, and the links between different types of participation and shelter programme outcomes are not well understood. Furthermore, recent case studies suggest that misguided participation strategies may be to blame for failures. This study analysed 19 shelter projects implemented in the Philippines following Typhoon Haiyan in November 2013 to identify the forms of participation employed. Using fuzzy‐set qualitative comparative analysis, it assessed how household participation in the planning, design, and construction phases of shelter reconstruction led to outcomes of household satisfaction and safe shelter design. Participation was operationalised via eight central project tasks, revealing that the involvement of households in the early planning stages of projects and in construction activities were important for satisfaction and design outcomes, whereas engagement during the design phase of projects had little impact on the selected outcomes. National Science Foundation, United States Agency for International Development Office of U.S. Foreign Disaster Assistance, Nicolas R. and Nancy D. Petry Fellowship in Construction Engineering and Management
- Published
- 2019
31. Resilience from the ground up: how are local resilience perceptions and global frameworks aligned?
- Author
-
Mamadou Touré, John G. McPeak, Yacouba Deme, Daouda Cissé, Bara Gueye, Emilie Beauchamp, Jennifer Abdella, Hannah Patnaik, Susannah Fisher, Aly Bocoum, Papa Koulibaly, and Momath Ndao
- Subjects
Paper ,Internationality ,010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciences ,Climate Change ,media_common.quotation_subject ,0211 other engineering and technologies ,Climate change ,Disaster Planning ,climate adaptation ,Social Welfare ,02 engineering and technology ,Mali ,01 natural sciences ,Proxy (climate) ,Sahel ,Perception ,Humans ,Sociology ,Natural disaster ,resilience ,Environmental planning ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences ,media_common ,021110 strategic, defence & security studies ,Food security ,ComputerSystemsOrganization_COMPUTER-COMMUNICATIONNETWORKS ,General Social Sciences ,food security ,Resilience, Psychological ,Climate resilience ,Senegal ,subjective indicators ,well‐being ,Papers ,Well-being ,General Earth and Planetary Sciences - Abstract
Numerous resilience measurement frameworks for climate programmes have emerged over the past decade to operationalise the concept and aggregate results within and between programmes. Proxies of resilience, including subjective measures using perception data, have been proposed to measure resilience, but there is limited evidence on their validity and use for policy and practice. This article draws on research on the Decentralising Climate Funds project of the Building Resilience and Adaptation to Climate Extremes and Disasters programme, which supports communities in Mali and Senegal to improve climate resilience through locally controlled adaptation funds. It explores attributes of resilience from this bottom‐up perspective to assess its predictors and alignment with food security, as a proxy of well‐being. We find different patterns when comparing resilience and the well‐being proxy, illustrating that the interplay between the two is still unclear. Results also point to the importance of contextualising resilience, raising implications for aggregating results.
- Published
- 2019
32. Complexity, continuity and change: livelihood resilience in the Darfur region of Sudan
- Author
-
Helen Young and Musa Adam Ismail
- Subjects
Paper ,010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciences ,Climate Change ,conflict ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Pastoralism ,0211 other engineering and technologies ,Climate change ,Disaster Planning ,maladaptive strategies ,adaptation ,02 engineering and technology ,environmental variability ,livelihoods ,01 natural sciences ,farming ,Conflict, Psychological ,Sudan ,recovery ,Development economics ,Humans ,Darfur ,Adaptation (computer science) ,resilience ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences ,media_common ,021110 strategic, defence & security studies ,seasonality ,business.industry ,transformation ,General Social Sciences ,Agriculture ,Resilience, Psychological ,Processes of change ,Livelihood ,Livestock farming ,Papers ,General Earth and Planetary Sciences ,Psychological resilience ,Business ,pastoralism - Abstract
Darfur farming and pastoralist livelihoods are both adaptations to the environmental variability that characterises the region. This article describes this adaptation and the longer‐term transformation of these specialised livelihoods from the perspective of local communities. Over several decades farmers and herders have experienced a continuous stream of climate, conflict and other shocks, which, combined with wider processes of change, have transformed livelihoods and undermined livelihood institutions. Their well‐rehearsed specialist strategies are now combined with new strategies to cope. These responses help people get by in the short term but risk antagonising not only their specialist strategies but also those of others. A combination of factors has undermined the former integration between farming and pastoralism and their livelihood institutions. Efforts to build resilience in similar contexts must take a long‐term view of livelihood adaptation as a specialisation, and consider the implications of new strategies for the continuity and integration of livelihood specialisations.
- Published
- 2019
33. Building resilience to climate risks through social protection: from individualised models to systemic transformation
- Author
-
Martina Ulrichs, Cecilia Costella, and Rachel Slater
- Subjects
Paper ,Adult ,Male ,Risk ,Cash transfers ,010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciences ,Safety net ,Climate Change ,0211 other engineering and technologies ,Disaster Planning ,Public Policy ,02 engineering and technology ,social protection ,01 natural sciences ,Empirical research ,Humans ,Uganda ,cash transfers ,Resilience (network) ,climate ,resilience ,Qualitative Research ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences ,021110 strategic, defence & security studies ,Adaptive capacity ,Public economics ,Warning system ,General Social Sciences ,Resilience, Psychological ,Kenya ,Action (philosophy) ,Social protection ,Papers ,General Earth and Planetary Sciences ,Female ,Business ,Ethiopia - Abstract
This article analyses the role of social protection programmes in contributing to people's resilience to climate risks. Drawing from desk-based and empirical studies in Ethiopia, Kenya and Uganda, it finds that social transfers make a strong contribution to the capacity of individuals and households to absorb the negative impacts of climate-related shocks and stresses. They do so through the provision of reliable, national social safety net systems-even when these are not specifically designed to address climate risks. Social protection can also increase the anticipatory capacity of national disaster response systems through scalability mechanisms, or pre-emptively through linkages to early action and early warning mechanisms. Critical knowledge gaps remain in terms of programmes' contributions to the adaptive capacity required for long-term resilience. The findings offer insights beyond social protection on the importance of robust, national administrative systems as a key foundation to support people's resilience to climate risks.
- Published
- 2019
34. Humanitarian governance and resilience building: Ethiopia in comparative perspective
- Author
-
Isabelle Desportes, Dorothea Hilhorst, Cecile W.J. de Milliano, Disaster Research Unit, Freie Universität Berlin, International Institute of Social Studies (ISS), Erasmus University Rotterdam (ISS), Freie Universität Berlin, Academic staff unit, and ISS PhD
- Subjects
Paper ,010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciences ,Disaster risk reduction ,International Cooperation ,0211 other engineering and technologies ,Resilience building ,02 engineering and technology ,Public administration ,humanitarian governance ,disaster risk reduction ,Community Networks ,01 natural sciences ,Order (exchange) ,Political science ,11. Sustainability ,Ethnography ,Theory of Change ,Humans ,Resilience (network) ,resilience ,ComputingMilieux_MISCELLANEOUS ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences ,021110 strategic, defence & security studies ,[SHS.SOCIO]Humanities and Social Sciences/Sociology ,Humanitarian aid ,business.industry ,Corporate governance ,1. No poverty ,General Social Sciences ,Theory of change ,Relief Work ,[SHS.SCIPO]Humanities and Social Sciences/Political science ,localisation ,Papers ,General Earth and Planetary Sciences ,Ethiopia ,business - Abstract
Humanitarian governance is usually understood according to the classic, Dunantist paradigm that accords central importance to international humanitarian agencies. However, this is increasingly paralleled by 'resilience humanitarianism' that focuses, among other things, on including national actors in humanitarian governance. This article views humanitarian governance as emerging through interactions between authorities, implementing agencies and communities. It is based on interactive ethnography in five countries by Partners for Resilience (PfR). Using the Theory of Change (ToC) tool, it analyses the various interpretations and priorities of actors involved in humanitarian problems, solutions and programme governance. For example, PfR had a 'software' focus, aiming to unlock communities' potential for resilience, whereas communities and authorities preferred to receive tangible 'hardware' support. The findings highlight the crucial role of local authorities in shaping humanitarian aid. This is especially pertinent in view of the international agenda to localise aid, which requires the understanding and support of national actors in order to responsibly protect the vulnerable.
- Published
- 2019
35. Emergency drills for agricultural drought response: a case study in Guatemala
- Author
-
Vesalio Mora, Edwin Rojas, Estuardo Girón, Obdulio Fuentes, Ada Gaytán, Anna Müller, Jorge Díaz, and Jacob van Etten
- Subjects
Paper ,010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciences ,0211 other engineering and technologies ,climate adaptation ,Disaster Planning ,02 engineering and technology ,01 natural sciences ,institutional capacity ,Humans ,Natural disaster ,Environmental planning ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences ,021110 strategic, defence & security studies ,Food security ,Emergency management ,business.industry ,General Social Sciences ,Capacity building ,slow‐onset disasters ,Agriculture ,Guatemala ,Livelihood ,Droughts ,Preparedness ,Papers ,General Earth and Planetary Sciences ,emergency drill ,Business ,Element (criminal law) ,cyclical drought - Abstract
Drills are an important element of disaster management, helping to increase preparedness and reduce the risk of real-time failure. Yet, they are not applied systematically to slow-onset disasters such as a drought, which causes damage that is not instantly apparent and thus does not solicit immediate action. This case study evaluates how drills inform institutional responses to slow-onset disasters. It spotlights Guatemala, a country where drought has severe impacts on livelihoods and the food security of small farmers. By implementing part of the Ministry of Agriculture, Livestock and Food's institutional response plan for drought, it explores how drills can help to detect issues in emergency response and to foster an institutional focus on improvements in preparedness. The results reveal that drills alone do not trigger institutional improvements if unsupported by a wider strategy that seeks to enhance capacities and protocols. These findings are valuable, however, in making problems transparent and in creating the space for discussion.
- Published
- 2018
36. The social meaning of money: multidimensional implications of humanitarian cash and voucher assistance.
- Author
-
Vogel, Birte, Tschunkert, Kristina, and Schläpfer, Isabelle
- Subjects
HUMANITARIAN assistance ,GOVERNMENT aid ,SOCIAL impact ,PHILANTHROPISTS - Abstract
Copyright of Disasters is the property of Wiley-Blackwell and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. Islamic faith‐based organisations and their role in building social capital for post‐disaster recovery in Indonesia.
- Author
-
Nurdin, Muhammad Riza
- Subjects
- *
SOCIAL capital , *CULTURAL awareness , *VOLCANIC eruptions , *DISASTER resilience , *DISASTER relief , *EARTHQUAKES - Abstract
This paper investigates the role of Islamic faith‐based organisations (FBOs) in Indonesia and examines the way in which their disaster recovery aid can be successful or less successful depending on social capital formation in communities affected by a disaster. The paper argues that Islamic FBOs play a prominent role in disaster‐affected communities by building new social capital or strengthening existing social capital. Failure to do so may affect a community's recovery and its long‐term resilience. Applying a framework that considers three types of social capital—bonding, bridging, and linking—from a comparative perspective, the paper discusses two cases of disaster recovery: one following the earthquake that struck Aceh in 2013; and the other after the Mount Kelud volcanic eruptions in East Java in 2014. In both instances, the findings highlight the importance of the village facilitator, cultural sensitivity, and understanding of local indigenous and religious practices for successful disaster recovery. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. Quantifying social capital creation in post‐disaster recovery aid in Indonesia: methodological innovation by an AI‐based language model.
- Author
-
Marutschke, Daniel Moritz, Nurdin, Muhammad Riza, and Hirono, Miwa
- Subjects
- *
LANGUAGE models , *ARTIFICIAL intelligence , *SOCIAL capital , *NATURAL language processing , *DISASTER relief , *ETHNOLOGY research , *DISASTER resilience - Abstract
Smooth interaction with a disaster‐affected community can create and strengthen its social capital, leading to greater effectiveness in the provision of successful post‐disaster recovery aid. To understand the relationship between the types of interaction, the strength of social capital generated, and the provision of successful post‐disaster recovery aid, intricate ethnographic qualitative research is required, but it is likely to remain illustrative because it is based, at least to some degree, on the researcher's intuition. This paper thus offers an innovative research method employing a quantitative artificial intelligence (AI)‐based language model, which allows researchers to re‐examine data, thereby validating the findings of the qualitative research, and to glean additional insights that might otherwise have been missed. This paper argues that well‐connected personnel and religiously‐based communal activities help to enhance social capital by bonding within a community and linking to outside agencies and that mixed methods, based on the AI‐based language model, effectively strengthen text‐based qualitative research. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. Diasporas as a linchpin in local and international humanitarian action: a case study of the Chinese in Aceh following the 2004 tsunami.
- Author
-
Hirono, Miwa
- Subjects
- *
DIASPORA , *INDIAN Ocean Tsunami, 2004 , *TSUNAMI warning systems , *CHINESE diaspora , *TSUNAMIS , *HUMANITARIAN assistance - Abstract
Chinese humanitarian actors have worked frequently with the Chinese diaspora in disaster‐affected areas, but little, if any, research has been conducted into the important role of the diaspora in disaster response and humanitarian assistance. This paper investigates what local knowledge the Chinese diaspora has offered to humanitarian actors from the People's Republic of China (PRC), and how this has contributed to their effectiveness. Based on a case study of the semi‐autonomous Indonesian province of Aceh in the aftermath of the Indian Ocean tsunami of 2004, this paper argues that the diaspora can serve as a linchpin in local and international humanitarian action. It can do so by strengthening networks and bringing together local ethnic communities, local governments, and the PRC's humanitarian actors, while also offering local knowledge in the form of contextual memory. Such local knowledge may have to be fully utilised to address any underlying ethnic tensions in disaster‐affected areas. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. 'Forgotten crises' as forgotten sites of knowledge production for building lasting peace.
- Author
-
Tanyag, Maria
- Subjects
- *
PEACEBUILDING , *CRISES , *LOCAL knowledge , *CLIMATE change , *PANDEMICS - Abstract
'Forgotten crises' constitute a permanent background to any present and future global humanitarian and development efforts. They represent a significant impediment to promoting lasting peace given concurrent catastrophes exacerbated by climate change. Yet, they are routinely neglected and remain unresolved. Building on critical and feminist approaches, this paper theorises them as forgotten sites of local knowledge production. It asks: what is local knowledge of and from forgotten crises? How can it be recovered and resignified, and what lessons can such knowledge provide at the global level? Drawing on examples from the intersections of conflict, disasters, and pandemics in the Philippines, the paper makes a case for valuing local knowledge arising from forgotten crises because of its potential contribution to adapting global humanitarian and development systems to address crises on multiple fronts. Such epistemic margins are generative of vantage points that can present a fuller account of how different crises interact and how best to respond to them. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. Conflict, COVID‐19, and crisis response: shifting from 'pivoting' to preparedness.
- Author
-
Gordon, Eleanor
- Subjects
- *
COVID-19 , *WAR , *PREPAREDNESS , *CRISES - Abstract
This paper assesses the extent to which the COVID‐19 (Coronavirus disease 2019) pandemic directed the attention and resources of the international community away from peacebuilding, and the potential impact of this on conflict‐affected environments. It draws from a global survey, interviews, and conversations with peacebuilding practitioners, publicly available information on peacebuilding funding, and real‐time data on conflict events from the Armed Conflict Location & Event Data Project. The paper argues that resources and attention have 'pivoted' away from peacebuilding to tackle the threat presented by COVID‐19, and that this can—but does not always—adversely affect conflict dynamics. It contends that this pivoting belies the interconnectedness of crises, leads to 'forgotten crises' and escalating threats, and exposes deficiencies in peacebuilding funding and, more broadly, preparedness and crisis response. Crises do, however, provide opportunities for reflection and change, including how to address these deficiencies and, in so doing, advance more efficient, effective, and ethical practice. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. The dynamic space of aid relations in protracted internal displacement: the case of Sri Lanka's northern Muslims.
- Author
-
Brun, Cathrine, Alikhan, Mohideen Mohamed, Jayatilaka, Danesh, Chalkiadaki, Eva, and Erdal, Marta Bivand
- Subjects
- *
INTERNALLY displaced persons , *MUSLIMS , *LOCAL knowledge - Abstract
Aid relations in protracted displacement comprise a diversity of actors with different influence and involvement over time. Building on the case of Sri Lanka's northern Muslim's expulsion from the north of the country in 1990, this paper investigates the dynamic space of aid relations in their drawn‐out internal displacement. The study draws on 38 key informant interviews and 10 focus‐group discussions, conducted in Sri Lanka (Jaffna, Mannar, Puttalam, and Colombo) in 2022. The paper contributes new knowledge of the local dynamics of assistance in protracted displacement, by analysing the roles of a wide set of actors within this dynamic space of aid relations over time. The analysis incorporates angles and voices often overlooked in mainstream humanitarian studies, including internally displaced persons, hosts, and Middle Eastern aid funders. The study argues that a long‐term perspective and a variety of voices provide foundations for more productive engagement with localisation in humanitarian action in protracted displacement crises. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. Between 'flight' and 'fight': does civilian resistance against rebels work?
- Author
-
Reichhold, Urban
- Subjects
- *
WAR , *RESEARCH questions , *CIVIL defense , *CHILDREN'S books , *DECEPTION , *FLIGHT - Abstract
Understanding the dynamics of nonviolent action in situations of armed conflict has been labelled as the 'new frontier' in resistance studies. This paper assesses the growing body of literature on civilian resistance against rebel groups. Drawn from a systematic review of academic articles, book chapters, and policy documents, examples of civilian resistance are ordered in three distinct categories of unarmed action: deception; dissent; and defiance. This classification provides the conceptual framework to tackle the main research question: does civilian resistance against rebels work to protect unarmed populations from violence and harm? By scrutinising the effectiveness of civilian resistance, the paper seeks to provide a necessary corrective to the dominant view expressed in the literature, which, as argued, is overly optimistic regarding the prospects of wringing substantial concessions from armed groups via nonviolent action. The paper concludes with a discussion of policy implications, focusing on normative challenges facing external actors eager to support civilian resisters. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. The coloniality of power in Uganda's Nakivale Refugee Settlement: struggling for humanitarian authority amidst the 2018 corruption scandal.
- Author
-
Tegenbos, Jolien
- Abstract
This paper addresses the complexity of studying the coloniality of humanitarianism and present‐day relationships of power and authority in refugee settings. Building on 13 months of fieldwork, it presents an ethnographic account of the 2018 refugee corruption scandal in Uganda and the Nakivale Refugee Settlement. The core of this paper's argument is based on a grounded analysis of how ‘the saga’ not only exposed corruptive practices in the country's refugee programme, but also the meanings of being ‘human’ and what this implies for making claims to humanitarian authority. The paper asserts that the way in which the scandal unravelled in the (inter)national media, and how it affected sociopolitical tensions in the camp, revealed a deeply fraught conception of both human and humanitarian duality, embedded in a coloniality of power. Ultimately, power imbalances, frictions, and conflicts between national, international, and refugee actors highlighted a deep‐rooted and historical struggle for humanity and legitimate humanitarian authority. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. A positive yet complicated case of gender‐based violence coordination: a qualitative study of Lebanon's protracted humanitarian emergency, 2012–22.
- Author
-
Raftery, Philomena, Usta, Jinan, Hossain, Mazeda, and Palmer, Jennifer
- Abstract
Gender‐based violence (GBV), a global health and human rights concern, often intensifies during emergencies. This paper explores the evolution of GBV coordination in Lebanon's protracted Syrian refugee crisis from 2012–22. Utilising 38 in‐depth interviews and a document review, the findings were analysed using the framework for effective GBV coordination. Lebanon provides a positive yet complicated example of GBV coordination. Initially established to address the refugee crisis, it matured into a collaborative national coordination mechanism, fostering trust and advancing localisation amidst sectarian complexities. However, the volatile, restrictive policy context hindered government co‐leadership and engagement with refugee‐led organisations. While essential GBV response services were expanded nationwide, lack of an interagency strategy on GBV risk mitigation and prevention compromised lasting change. The paper emphasises the importance of dedicated GBV coordinators, multi‐year funding, and increased attention to GBV prevention. The findings underscore the transformative potential of humanitarian responses and advocate for enhanced engagement with national stakeholders to promote sustainability in protracted crises. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. Academic publishing in disaster risk reduction: past, present, and future.
- Author
-
Alexander, David, Gaillard, JC, Kelman, Ilan, Marincioni, Fausto, Penning‐Rowsell, Edmund, Niekerk, Dewald, and Vinnell, Lauren J.
- Subjects
SCHOLARLY publishing ,PREDATORY publishing ,BIBLIOGRAPHY ,DISASTERS ,SOCIAL networks - Abstract
Nowadays there are approximately 80 Anglophone journals that deal primarily with disaster risk reduction (DRR) and allied fields. This large array signals a sustained, if uneven, growth in DRR scholarship but also competition between the offerings of different publishers and institutions. The purpose of this article is first to summarise the development of academic publishing on DRR from its early beginnings to the present day. The paper then evaluates the current state of publishing in this field and discusses possible future trends. Next, it identifies some possible opportunities, challenges, expectations, and commitments for journal editors both within DRR and academia more broadly, including those that refer to changes in the use of terminology, the relentless increase in the number of papers submitted, the expansion and dangers of predatory journals, different peer review models, open access versus paywalls, citations and bibliography metrics, academic social networks, and copyright and distribution issues. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. Contesting the crisis narrative: epidemic accounts in Sierra Leone, Tanzania, and Democratic Republic of the Congo.
- Author
-
Lees, Shelley, Enria, Luisa, and James, Myfanwy
- Subjects
EBOLA virus ,EPIDEMICS ,HIV ,CRISIS management ,COVID-19 pandemic ,ETHNOLOGY research - Abstract
Copyright of Disasters is the property of Wiley-Blackwell and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. Disaster mobilities, temporalities, and recovery: experiences of the tsunami in the Maldives.
- Author
-
Kothari, Uma, Arnall, Alex, and Azfa, Aishath
- Subjects
REFUGEE resettlement ,TSUNAMI warning systems ,INDIAN Ocean Tsunami, 2004 ,DISASTER resilience ,TSUNAMIS - Abstract
Large‐scale disasters are frequently portrayed as temporally bounded, linear events after which survivors are encouraged to 'move on' as quickly as possible. In this paper, we explore how understandings of disaster mobilities and temporalities challenge such perspectives. Drawing on empirical research undertaken on Dhuvaafaru in the Maldives, a small island uninhabited until 2009 when it was populated by people displaced by the Indian Ocean tsunami of 2004, we examine what such understandings mean in the context of sudden population displacement followed by prolonged resettlement. The study reveals the diversity of disaster mobilities, how these reflect varied and complex temporalities of past, present, and future, and how processes of disaster recovery are temporally extended, uncertain, and often linger. In addition, the paper shows how attending to these dynamics contributes to understandings of how post‐disaster settlement brings stability for some people while producing ongoing feelings of loss, longing, and unsettlement in others. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. Five shades of grey: variants of 'political' humanitarianism.
- Subjects
HUMANITARIANISM ,NEUTRALITY - Abstract
Copyright of Disasters is the property of Wiley-Blackwell and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. Resilience and the role of equids in humanitarian crises.
- Author
-
Clancy, Cara, Watson, Tamlin, and Raw, Zoe
- Subjects
CRISIS management ,EQUIDAE ,MIDDLE-income countries ,HIGH-income countries ,LOW-income countries ,POOR people ,CRISES - Abstract
In times of crisis, working equids can play a pivotal role in supporting vulnerable people in lower middle income countries. However, their contributions are rarely acknowledged in academic research, media reporting, international policy, and development initiatives. This paper explores the involvement of working equids in humanitarian emergencies, notably those pertaining to conflict, drought, climate change, and natural hazards. It presents 'critical cases', informed by document analysis of policy papers, historical texts, and academic publications. In addition, it includes the findings of semi‐structured interviews with key informants, primarily field staff working for frontline services in crisis zones, conducted in mid 2020. The paper develops evidence on the role of working equids in crisis situations—expanding the concept of 'resilience' to include working animals and contributing to recent academic discussions in the fields of disaster and development studies—highlighting their importance for global policy, resilience programming, and disaster risk reduction, including efforts to achieve the Sustainable Development Goals. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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