Program 21 - 23 September
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
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
Towards what futures? The political dimensions of sustainable development and resilience
David Olsson, Mikael Granberg, David Olsson, Miriam Cullen, Proscovia Svärd
Wednesday September 22, 2021 11:00 - 12:30 G
- From technocracy to democracy: How engagement with power asymmetries and values can be promoted in the processes of improving climate resilience and adaptation
- The risks of anticipatory governance in the context of climate change mobility and the thirst for more data
- Sustainable Development Goal 16 and the Liberian truth and reconciliation commission’s documentation’s role in promoting a democratic society?
RCR Simulation Lab Demonstration
Kari Pihl, Per Alexander Esbjörnsson
Wednesday September 22, 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
Wednesday September 22, 2021 10:30 - 11:00
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.
Colloquium: European Alliance of Disaster Research Institutes (EUADRI)
Jörgen Sparf
Tuesday September 21, 2021 17:00 - 18:30 A
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
Anticipatory governance - Dealing with uncertain futures
Florian Neisser, Thomas Kox, Gregory Vigneaux, Peter McGowran, Sandra Pfister, Shibaji Bose, Shilpi Srivastava
Tuesday September 21, 2021 17:00 - 18:30 C
-Preempting the next disaster. The fundamental ambiguity of disaster management
-Autopoietic Socio-Technical Systems: A new lens for understanding anticipation
-Anticipating futures: preparedness under radical uncertainty in Gujarat, India
-Assemblage Theory & Disaster Risk Management: conceptualising disasters-in-the-making
Organizational learning and change during the "Blue Skies"
Femke Mulder, PAOLO CAVALIERE, Cornelia Posch, Gintaras Labutis, Lucia Castro Herrera
Tuesday September 21, 2021 17:00 - 18:30 D
- The Spectrum of Practices for Social Media Listening for Crisis Management
- Cultural asset mapping: building networks among cultural stewards and emergency managers
- The application of Capability Based Planning for emergency and disaster management needs
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
Rethinking disasters and social change: Beyond hope and despair
Flora Cornish, Nimesh Dhungana, Hanna Ruszczyk, Nina Baron, Nina Blom Andersen, Susanna Hoffman, Åsa Davidsson
Tuesday September 21, 2021 17:00 - 18:30 F
- Transitioning from hope to optimism and back again
- Disasters as an opportunity for improved environmental conditions
- An anthropologist’s view of the question of socio-cultural change or continuity post-disaster: old thoughts and new perspectives
- Social struggles of responsibility in transition from response to recovery – comparison of two Danish cases
Storytelling, Gamification & Co: Using Creative Tools to Design Disaster Cultures in the Anthropocene
Justine Walter, Coline Lapointe, Lina Zhou, Niklas Humble
Tuesday September 21, 2021 17:00 - 18:30 H
- Tackling Vulnerability through Gamification: Why, What, and How?
- Contagion (2011), or: How to Get Cheated out of Your Disaster Experience
--Computational Moral Support in Crisis Management - The Idea of Facilitating Decision Making
Break
Tuesday September 21, 2021 16:30 - 17:00
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
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
- Be (under-)prepared: Responding to Covid-19
- Rethinking Cultural/Social Resources as Disaster Adaptive Strategies toward Resilience: A Case from Sri Lanka
- Towards a richer understanding of Kosi river floods in Bihar, India: Deploying anthropological perspective
- Chronicle of a foretold disaster. Climate change, glacier melting, and risk perception in the Alps
Post-apocalyptic dystopias and disaster studies: Crossdisciplinary perspectives on environmental challenges today
Matias Barberis Rami, Emily Eyestone, Matias Barberis Rami
Tuesday September 21, 2021 15:00 - 17:00 D
- Displacement: uprooting, survival and perspectives
- Cannibalizing Utopia: Suzanne Césaire’s Ecofeminist critique of Colonial Discourse of the Tropics
Sharing Disaster Experience, Research and Innovation: A multi-hazard approach for risk management after Covid-19
Sebastien Boret, Takako Izumi, Sebastien Boret, Takako Izumi
Tuesday September 21, 2021 15:00 - 16:30 E
-Managing Mass Death in Times of Multiple Crisis: Lessons from the 2011 Japan Disasters and the Covid-19 pandemic
-Multi-hazards disaster response and recovery: experiencing natural hazards in pandemic
- 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