Why Vulnerability Still Matters

Why Vulnerability Still Matters

The Politics of Disaster Risk Creation

Bankoff, Greg; Hilhorst, Dorothea

Taylor & Francis Ltd

04/2022

240

Mole

Inglês

9781032113432

15 a 20 dias

467

Descrição não disponível.
List of Illustrations

List of Contributors






Introduction: Why vulnerability still matters. Dorothea Hilhorst and Greg Bankoff
Part I Why Vulnerability Still Matters




Remaking the world in our own image: Vulnerability, resilience, and adaptation as historical discourses. Greg Bankoff



Between precarity and the security state: A post-vulnerability view. Kenneth Hewitt



Creating disaster risk and constructing gendered vulnerability. Sarah Bradshaw, Brian Linneker, and Lisa Overton



What must be done to rescue the concept of vulnerability? Terry Cannon
Part II Vulnerability, Conflict, and State-society Relations




Disaster studies and its discontents: The postcolonial state in hazard and risk creation. Ayesha Siddiqi



Humanitarianism: Navigating between resilience and vulnerability. Dorothea Hilhorst



Resilience, food security, and the abandonment of crisis-affected populations. Susanne Jaspars



Vulnerability and resilience in a complex and chaotic context: Evidence from Mozambique. Luis Artur
Part III Disaster Risk Creation




Power writ small and large: How disaster cannot be understood without reference to pushing, pulling, coercing, and seducing. Ben Wisner.



Disaster risk creation: The new vulnerability. Thea Dickinson and Ian Burton



Vulnerable Anthropocenes?: Towards an integrated approach. Kasia Mika and Ilan Kelman.



'The hottest summer ever!': Exploring vulnerability to climate change among grain producers in Eastern Norway. Bjornar Saether and Karen O'Brien

Index
Este título pertence ao(s) assunto(s) indicados(s). Para ver outros títulos clique no assunto desejado.
disasters;vulnerability;politics of disasters;politics of climate change;disaster creation;disaster risk;climate risk;DRR;UN;Climate Change;Humanitarian Aid;Young Men;South Sudan;Vulnerability Paradigm;CCA;International Humanitarian Law;Disaster Diplomacy;Asp;Eastern Norway;Risk Reduction Including Climate Change;Resilience Practices;Food Aid;Reduction Including Climate Change Adaptation;SARS CoV-2;Resilience Regime;Disaster Studies;Disaster Vulnerability;Acute Malnutrition;Norwegian Agriculture;Norwegian Meteorological Institute;Food Aid Practices