Exploring communication practices that promote community participation and collective action for reducing disaster risks in New Zealand [0.03%]
促进新西兰社区参与和集体行动以减少灾害风险的沟通实践探究
Manomita Das,Julia Becker,Emma E H Doyle
Manomita Das
Emergency management agencies in New Zealand are increasingly engaging with communities to promote civic participation and collective action for reducing disaster risks. Utilising a mixed-methods approach, this paper explores the communicat...
Responding domestically: British Islamic faith-based organisations' crisis response in the UK during the COVID-19 pandemic [0.03%]
国内应对:英国伊斯兰信仰基础型组织在新冠疫情期间的危机应对措施
Jennifer Philippa Eggert,Behar Sadriu
Jennifer Philippa Eggert
Contributing to debates about faith-based humanitarian action and development as well as domestic programming, this article examines the domestic COVID-19 (coronavirus disease 2019) responses of two British Islamic faith-based organisations...
Nicolas Rost
Nicolas Rost
This article presents a simple regression model to inform decisions on the allocation amount from the United Nations' Central Emergency Response Fund (CERF) in response to new or deteriorating humanitarian emergencies. The model offers a qu...
William A Veness,Nancy Balfour,Jimmy OKeeffe et al.
William A Veness et al.
Droughts are a primary driver of humanitarian crises in arid regions, yet early warning systems that index humanitarian financing often omit water security data in favour of food security monitoring. Based on 42 expert interviews assessing ...
Vulnerabilities of people with different types of disabilities in disasters: a rapid evidence review and qualitative research [0.03%]
不同类型残疾人在灾害中的脆弱性:快速证据回顾和定性研究
Kien Nguyen-Trung,Trinh Thi Thu Thuy,Nguyen Phuong Anh et al.
Kien Nguyen-Trung et al.
Despite the growth of disaster scholarship, the topic of how and why climate-related disasters and extreme weather events vary among people with different types of disabilities remains unexplored. To help fill the gap, this study draws on a...
Chris Weeks
Chris Weeks
A disaster is frequently cited as a driver of human trafficking, with claims that earthquakes, tsunamis, or typhoons create a chaotic post-calamity environment ripe for traffickers to recruit their victims. Theory suggests that increased po...
Barriers to and opportunities for the restoration of mana in emergency management legislation and its implementation for Māori [0.03%]
紧急管理立法及其对毛利人实施过程中恢复Mana的障碍与机遇
Matthew Rout,Shaun Awatere,John Reid et al.
Matthew Rout et al.
Ever since colonisation by the British in 1840, Māori, the indigenous peoples of Aotearoa New Zealand, have been fighting to reclaim their mana (authority and influence) over their whenua (land). They were set to regain mana in emergency m...
Healthcare, solidarity, and moral community in Myanmar's humanitarian crisis and revolution [0.03%]
缅甸人道主义危机和革命中的医疗、团结和道德共同体
Anne Décobert
Anne Décobert
Drawing on in-depth qualitative research, this article explores how the experiences and practices of health workers responding to humanitarian crises can foster new forms of solidarity, moral community, and state-society relations in situat...
COVID-19 impacts on emergency responder resilience in Bergen and London [0.03%]
COVID-19对卑尔根和伦敦紧急救援人员韧性的影响
Jarle Eid,Ilan Kelman,Kjersti B Valdersnes et al.
Jarle Eid et al.
This study qualitatively compares how 18 experienced emergency responders from the fire services in Bergen, Norway, and London, United Kingdom, maintained and adapted their organisation's work, routines, and leadership practices to maintain...
Eija Meriläinen
Eija Meriläinen
This paper studies how the relations between nature and society are constructed in disaster governance frameworks. Dominant disaster governance frameworks present nature and society as separate realms, and the organisation of society is inc...