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
On the epistemology of crises and disasters
Evangelia Petridou, Jörgen Sparf, Evangelia Petridou, Jörgen Sparf, Kari Pihl, Luc Rombout, Olof Oscarsson, Olov Hemmingsson
Wednesday September 22, 2021 13:30 - 14:40 F
- Crisis-as-practice: Conceptualizing the role of everyday work practices in crisis management
- I became TRANS, how about you. - On transdisciplinarity and opening windows
- Designing Immersive Simulation Exercises: Evidence from an Experimental Study
Towards what futures? The political dimensions of sustainable development and resilience
David Olsson, Mikael Granberg, Elisa Rieger, Kaniska Singh, Mikael Granberg
Wednesday September 22, 2021 13:30 - 14:40 G
- Emerging political considerations in climate change adaptation
- Sustainable Energy Landscape Strategies - Feasibility, Fusion and Alternative Futures
- Resilient- Society ‘for’ Sustainable Development? - Deconstructing the ‘problem representation’ within Disaster Management Policies in India
Colloquium: How and why develop scenarios for training students to use their knowledge in practice?
Aud Solveig Nilsen, Dina Abdel-Fattah, Linda Marie Stakkeland, Natalia Andreassen, Richard Kotter, Simon Griffiths
Wednesday September 22, 2021 15:00 - 17:00 A
The interplay of crisis and art
Evangelia Petridou, Anna-Sara Fagerholm, Dimitri Ioannides, Evangelia Petridou, Karina Goransson, Konstantinos Avramidis, Linda Thompson, Robert Soden, Todd Lowery
Wednesday September 22, 2021 15:00 - 17:00 B
-Architecture as a Material Social Record: Drawing an Atlas of Athenian Crises
-Exploring how crises are visualized in design activism campaigns
-Art/Science Collaboration as a Critical Technical Practice in Disaster Research
-“Barricades, Blocks, and Borders: Lines of Division and Lines of Communication in Contested Urban Spaces”
-Street Art and the ‘Right to the City’ in a Fragmented Metropolis: The Case of Beirut
Preparing for future crises: Temporal possibilities and their materialisations
Cecilie Baann, Charline Kopf, Sarah-Jane Cooper-Knock, Tanja Hendriks, Charline Kopf, Emily Eyestone, Jonathan Eaton, Miriam Jensen, Tanja Hendriks
Wednesday September 22, 2021 15:00 - 17:00 F
- When invasiveness manifests: the zebra mussel and its implications for conflict management and planning practices
- Decolonizing Disaster Preparedness in the Caribbean: The Role of Non-Sovereign Territories and Efforts at Regional Cooperation
- Counting on Crisis: planning and preparing disaster relief interventions in Malawi
- Rebuilding the Future: Disaster Anticipation and Recovery Planning in Vancouver, Canada
- Planning for multiple disasters along West African borders: between standardisation and localisation
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
Break
Wednesday September 22, 2021 15:00 - 15:30
Community response to crises and disasters: from preparedness to practices
Linda Kvarnlöf, Roine Johansson, Celie Hanson, Chika Watanabe, Erna Danielsson, Kerstin Eriksson, Lachlan Summers, Pär Olausson, Sophie Kolmodin
Wednesday September 22, 2021 15:30 - 17:30 C
- Dynamics of Collaboration: Exploring the Relationship Between Civil Society Organizations Caring for Refugees in Sweden
- Incorporating Histories: How Social Movements in Mexico City Avoid Solidarity
- Why volunteering? –Different reasons for getting involved
- Interrogating Household Preparedness: Gender, Race, and Resourcefulness in the Face of Disaster
- Critical Infrastructure Governance for Risk and Crisis Management - The Role of Regional Airports in Remote Areas
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
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.
Break
Thursday September 23, 2021 10:30 - 11:00
Caring about and Care in Disasters: On Privileges, Marginalisation and the Making of Critical (Social) Infrastructure Protection
Marco Krüger, Nicolas Bock, Alexander Roppelt, Andrea Futterer, Kati Orru, Kristi Nero
Thursday September 23, 2021 11:00 - 12:10 A
- The shortcomings of the regulatory state and its corporate actors in allocating resident physicians in rural areas in Germany
- Securitization and Economization of hospitals – structural aspects of individual health care and their challenges
- Crisis vulnerability assessment tool considering human and technological structures as well as social support through private relations and state actors
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
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
Climate Change Resilience in Small Communities – and the Methodological Approaches to Explore it
Mikkel Nedergaard, Nina Baron, Nina Blom Andersen, Rico Kongsager, Ana Sofia Ribeiro, Kerstin Eriksson, Linda Kvarnlöf, Shibaji Bose, Shilpi Srivastava
Thursday September 23, 2021 11:00 - 12:10 D
- Forest fires and landscape identity - values, meanings and engagement in local communities
- After the fire? Practices and perceptions of wildfire risk education in Portugal
- From vulnerability to transformation of gender role: Photo voice experience of Sundarbans’ women amidst climate change
On the epistemology of crises and disasters
Evangelia Petridou, Jörgen Sparf, Alankrita Anand, Eila Romo-Murphy, Markus Jenki, Tapio Reinekoski
Thursday September 23, 2021 11:00 - 12:10 E
- Methodology, Objectivity and Cultural Specificity in Multimethod Disaster Studies: Insights from the 2017 Bihar Floods Study
- Causal modelling of knowing how to prepare: A concept for a ‘strategic Bayesian operations room’ exercise
- How to get a feel for the (unknown) real? – Emergency exercises and the production of synthetic experience
Organizational learning and change during the "Blue Skies"
Femke Mulder, PAOLO CAVALIERE, Clara Decerbo, Fabio Carnelli, Lene Sandberg, Sofia Karlsson
Thursday September 23, 2021 11:00 - 12:10 F
- Emergency Response Organization Resilience: Identifying Factors for Success
- Coordinating internal crisis management in the event of a serious incident - Strategic level in higher education institutions
- Learning by doing and reflecting – the learning process of Swedish exercise organizers
- Enhancing risk governance by addressing key risk communication barriers during the prevention and preparedness phase in South Tyrol (Italy)
RCR Simulation Lab Demonstration
Kari Pihl, Per Alexander Esbjörnsson
Thursday September 23, 2021 11:00 - 11:30 I
RCR Simulation Lab is a laboratory at Mid Sweden University in Östersund where it is possible to simulate any environment or situation.
Break
Thursday September 23, 2021 12:30 - 13:30