Program 21 - 23 September
Law in Crisis? Analysing the Challenge of Making Laws Work in and after Disasters and Crises
Sari Kouvo, Andreas Moberg, Matthew Scott, Sari Kouvo
Wednesday September 22, 2021 13:30 - 14:40 E
- Scenario Analysis as a Method in Legal Science
- Pandemic preparedness and response in human rights-based multi-level governance perspective: Insights from four municipalities in Zimbabwe
-Different Language, Different Law? An Analysis of Key Concepts used in Swedish and EU Crisis Management Legislation
Law in Crisis? Analysing the Challenge of Making Laws Work in and after Disasters and Crises
Sari Kouvo, Anna Zemskova, Ester Herlin-Karnell, Julia Dahlqvist, Roman Peperhove
Wednesday September 22, 2021 11:00 - 12:30 E
- Republican theory and the EU: Emergency Laws and Constitutional Challenges
- Does necessity know the constitution? Constitutional powers in civilian crises
- But will it happen? Perception of Future Risks by Politicians in the German Bundestag (Parliament)
-Addressing Economic State of Emergency in the EU: the Analysis of the Economic Responses to the Covid-19 Pandemic
Knowledge management and “unforeseen crises”
Malte Schönefeld, Patricia Schütte, Jana-Andrea Frommer, Kees Boersma, Malte Schönefeld, Nathan Clark, Patricia Schütte
Tuesday September 21, 2021 17:00 - 17:50 E
- Knowledge Management – The Thing from Another World?
- Sustainable advanced learning in managing and communicating disaster risk by social media and crowd sourcing
Keynote session - Playing with realities
Ben Anderson, Kristina Iwata-Weickgenannt, Dimitri Ioannides, Evangelia Petridou, Jörgen Sparf
Wednesday September 22, 2021 09:00 - 10:30 A
Professor Ben Anderson is a cultural-political geographer at Durham University, UK. Throughout his empirical work, he is concerned with how futures are encountered, related to, and made present through ordinary affects, including hope and boredom.
Kristina Iwata-Weickgenannt is an associate professor of Japanese modern literature at Nagoya University, Japan, whose work has focused on geographies of marginality and marginalization in contemporary Japanese literature.
Keynote session - Imagining futures
Nick Wiltsher, Rebecca Bryant, Dimitri Ioannides, Evangelia Petridou, Jörgen Sparf
Thursday September 23, 2021 09:00 - 10:30 A
Rebecca Bryant is Professor of Cultural Anthropology at Utrecht University. She is an anthropologist of politics and law whose work has focused on ethnic conflict and displacement, border practices, post-conflict reconciliation, and contested sovereignty on both sides of the Cyprus Green Line, as well as in Turkey. Temporality has been a theme throughout all of her research, whether in her writings on the politics of the past and historical reconciliation or, more recently, on the temporal “stuckness” of citizens of unrecognized states.
Nick Wiltsher is a philosopher, working as an associate senior lecturer at Uppsala University in Sweden.
Institutional settings in flood hazard and risk management
Alexander Fekete, Konstantinos Karagiorgos, Lars Nyberg, Margreth Keiler, Sven Fuchs, Fafali Roy Ziga-Abortta, Francisca Vergara, Ida Wallin, Mathilde de Goër de Herve, Michail Spiliotis, Sylvia Kruse, Thomas Thaler
Thursday September 23, 2021 13:00 - 15:00 H
- Framing justice considerations within flood risk management
- Local innovations in flood hazard risk management in the past 10 years: the potential of upscaling niche developments to reduce institutional vulnerability in Austria
- Flash flood risk management in Malloa (Central Chile) during the 29-31 January 2021 precipitations: insights on social and institutional vulnerabilities
- An institutional vulnerability perspective on Flood Disaster Risk Management in Ghana
- Hazard classification and flood risk for the Greek part of Arda River
Impact of COVID-19 pandemic on population mental health: International perspectives
Mark Bosmans, Michel Dückers, Flavia Fulco, Mark Bosmans, Michel Dückers, Rasa Smaliukiene
Thursday September 23, 2021 11:00 - 12:10 B
- Monitoring population needs and wellbeing using panel studies
- The psychological impact of COVID-19 in Italy through the voices of experts
- Personal resilience: measuring psychological and biological stress during military conscription in the period of COVID-19 outbreak
How to ensure our future - prevention of low-chance or far-off catastrophes by states
Bas Heerma van Voss, Bas Heerma van Voss, Ivo Nas
Tuesday September 21, 2021 17:00 - 17:50 B
- Of Critical Importance: Toward a quantitative probabilistic risk assessment framework for critical infrastructure
- Why states are not keeping us safe in the long run: the theory and practice of preventing future societal destabalization
How differences matter in emergency, risk and crisis management
Mikkel Bøhm, Nina Blom Andersen, Erna Danielsson, Irene Petraroli, Kerstin Eriksson, Luc Rombout, Mikkel Bøhm, Nina Blom Andersen, Robin Chark
Wednesday September 22, 2021 15:00 - 17:15 G
- Gender in disaster risk reduction before a disaster: case studies from Fukuoka, Japan
- Women's invisible work in disaster contexts: Gender norms in speech on women's work after a forest fire in Sweden
- Gender difference in risk perception of public health crisis
- Oil, Religion, Manuel and Emergency Management: about 7 exercises showing that difference matters
- Expressions of gender – in a mono gendered setting
Focus on human needs: Understanding good and bad practices in public health crises
Lise Eilin Stene, Michel Dückers, Jurriaan Jacobs, Lisa Govasli Nilsen, Lise Eilin Stene, Michel Dückers
Tuesday September 21, 2021 15:00 - 16:30 B
- Preparing for the unexpected: A comparative study of policy responses addressing post-terror health reactions in Norway and France
- Psychosocial care to civilians affected by terrorist attacks in Norway (2011), France (2015), Belgium (2016), and the Netherlands (2019)
- Network professionalism: the interplay between professional work and network viability
- A closer look at evaluation challenges in post-disaster mental health and psychosocial support
Focus on human needs: Understanding good and bad practices in public health crises
Lise Eilin Stene, Michel Dückers, Mark Bosmans, Michel Dückers
Wednesday September 22, 2021 13:30 - 14:40 A
This session has been cancelled.
- New perspectives for emergency response – Lessons learned on crisis mapping from trials and exercises
- Your COP? - I see it differently. - Sharing experience of working with practitioners on COP
- Balancing levels of operational support of map-based tools for facilitating a common operational picture
- Maps and mapping practices in search and rescue operations in northern Norway
- Adoption and use of standard operating procedures for emergency response
Exploring Future Work Practices for Information Sharing and Achieving Common Situational Understanding in Disasters
Bjørn Erik Munkvold, Jaziar Radianti, Nadia Saad Noori, David Olave-Rojas, Janina Kosan, Jaziar Radianti, Sven Watzinger, Terje Gjøsæter, Theresa Berthold, Willem Treurniet, Vincent Suitela
Thursday September 23, 2021 13:00 - 15:00 D
- Harmonization of Terminology for Emergency Management
- Using quantitative data effectively to manage crises
- Dosed access to the common operational picture
- Future Full-Scale Digital Exercise for Emergency Management
- SCATTER (Strategische Patientenverlegung - Strategical transfer of patients) A computer-based simulation of inter-hospital transfer of critically ill patients
Envisioning the future by learning from the past: Arts and memory in interdisciplinary disaster risk reduction research
Paulina Jáuregui, Elisa Sevilla, Giuseppe Forino, Agathe Dupeyron, Elisa PUGA, Elisa Sevilla, Karen Pascal, María Isabel Cupuerán Yánez, MARIA JOSE JARRIN YANEZ, Teresa Armijos Burneo
Tuesday September 21, 2021 15:00 - 16:30 A
- How did we get to this? Understanding social construction of risk and capacities from the neighborhood history
- Interdisciplinary public history interventions in DRR in Museums and schools in Quito
- Co-creating an online platform on disaster risk reduction with highschool students in Quito, Ecuador: Lessons from Evaluation
- Disaster Passed: a singing, flashing and sobering glimpse into coping with volcanic eruptions
Emerging voices and pathways to inclusive disaster studies
Femke Mulder, Laura Kmoch, Ricardo Fuentealba, Damithri Jayasekara, Riwa Abdel Khalek, Robert Soden, Sneha Krishnan
Thursday September 23, 2021 13:30 - 15:00 B
- Community Knowledge Adoption Through Social Media: Reconstructing Saint-Martin After Hurricane Irma
-Cross-country use of participatory research methods in practice to enhance inclusive decision making
Emerging voices and pathways to inclusive disaster studies
Femke Mulder, Laura Kmoch, Ricardo Fuentealba, Anna Torres Abblitt, Chrysant Lily Kusumowardoyo, Damithri Jayasekara, Husna Wulansari, Valentina Carraro, Vanicka Arora
Tuesday September 21, 2021 13:00 - 14:50 B
- Reconstruction of Heritage in Bhaktapur, Nepal: Examining Tensions and Negotiations Between the ‘Local’ and the ‘Global’
- Towards Meaningful Participation: Co-researching with Persons with Disabilities in Central Sulawesi
- Reviewing the place of Migrants in Disasters: A personal perspective
- Importance of creating a pathway for Voices to merge with Scientific Knowledge in Ecosystem-based Disaster Risk Reduction
- The C-word: potential contributions of Critical GIS to disaster studies
Emerging voices and pathways to inclusive disaster studies
Femke Mulder, Laura Kmoch, Ricardo Fuentealba, Katherine Campos-Knothe, Mariah Jenkins, Miguel Angel Trejo-Rangel, Noémie Gonzalez Bautista
Wednesday September 22, 2021 17:00 - 19:00 E
- The importance of context-relevant feminist perspectives in disaster studies. A case of multi-actor research on forest fires involving the Atikamekw First Nation
- Giving voice to the voiceless: connecting graduate students with High School students by incubating DRR plans through participatory mapping
- Considerations for creating equitable and inclusive communication campaigns associated with ShakeAlert, the Earthquake Early Warning System for the West Coast of the United States
- Everyday hazards in the experience of women who inhabit precarious settlements
Disaster recovery in the long-term
Jennifer Trivedi, Evangelia Petridou, Flavia Fulco, Kerstin Eriksson, Roine Johansson, Susanna Hoffman
Wednesday September 22, 2021 11:00 - 12:30 F
- Putting out Fires: A Multiple Streams Analysis
- 10 years of recovery process in Tōhoku through the eyes of the storytellers of the disaster
- The Oakland Berkeley Firestorm: A Thirty Year Chronicle of Emotions, Effects, and Their Import
Disaster recovery in the long-term
Jennifer Trivedi, Christopher Tharp, Jennifer Trivedi, Susanna Hoffman
Thursday September 23, 2021 13:30 - 15:00 I
- Situating ‘Verano Boricua’ Within Puerto Rico’s Financial Debt Crisis and Hurricane Maria Recovery Process
-- Cycles of Disasters, Long-term Recovery, and Identity: How Biloxi’s Recovery from Hurricane Katrina Started in 1969
Deep cultures of disaster: The significance of the anthropological perspective for understanding the interstices of hazards and disaster
Irena Leisbet Ceridwen Connon, Susanna Hoffman, Darina Pellowska, Francisca Vergara, Jasmina Schmidt, RAHUL YADUKA, Rebecca Lange
Thursday September 23, 2021 11:00 - 12:30 C
- The social (trans-)formation of risks in humanitarian project networks in South Sudan
- Reducing volcanic risk: who, how and for what? Anthropological approach to the perspectives of Mapuche communities in southern Chile
- Organisational narratives of past events and their implications for disaster preparation in civil protection and emergency management
- Towards a richer understanding of Kosi river floods in Bihar, India: Deploying anthropological perspective