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Preparing for future crises: Temporal possibilities and their materialisations Passed

Wednesday September 22, 2021 15:00 - 17:00 F

Workshop leaders: Cecilie Baann, Charline Kopf, Sarah-Jane Cooper-Knock, Tanja Hendriks
Presenters: Charline Kopf, Emily Eyestone, Jonathan Eaton, Miriam Jensen, Tanja Hendriks

  • When invasiveness manifests: the zebra mussel and its implications for conflict management and planning practices, Miriam Jensen
  • Decolonizing Disaster Preparedness in the Caribbean: The Role of Non-Sovereign Territories and Efforts at Regional Cooperation, Emily Eyestone
  • Counting on Crisis: planning and preparing disaster relief interventions in Malawi, Tanja Hendriks
  • Rebuilding the Future: Disaster Anticipation and Recovery Planning in Vancouver, Canada, Jonathan Eaton
  • Planning for multiple disasters along West African borders: between standardisation and localisation, Charline Kopf

Panel description

Envisioning the future entails concrete actions and plans that simultaneously seek to draw on past experiences and stake out new courses for improving human lives and capacities. Disaster preparations sit right in the middle of these temporal entanglements of the past, present and future. The relations between disaster preparations and visions of the future bring the temporal possibilities of what “may happen”, what “could have been”, and what “might come to be if…”, into an actionable present. As disaster preparations plan for crisis-prone futures, experience from the past has also shown the limits of what planning can do and what we can actually prepare for. Thus, planners are caught in a perpetual cycle of anticipations, preparations and other forms of materialising crisis responses.

In this panel, we address the plans for disasters-to-come. From terrorist attacks, mass displacement crises, epidemics, climate-change induced catastrophes to bio-terror threats and species extinction, the preparation for these disasters come in a myriad of forms. The planning process entails concrete exercises, discursive framings of both visions of security and possible threats, and include multiple socio-political practices and relations. Some plans envision dystopian scenarios whereas others promote more utopian visions of collaborative efforts in which state and non-state actors address the existing gaps between disaster relief responses and disaster risk reduction programs. Some plans are narrow scoped and concerned with preparing for the next emergency in a specific geographical area or regarding a particular type of threat or risk. Others are broader and deal with tackling intersecting crises in the Anthropocene and how to reconcile the current status quo with potentially safer and securer futures, such as projects of preservation.

We welcome contributions that zoom in on the empirical and creative aspects of creating such plans, e.g. the writing of scenarios; the practical exercises involved; theoretical explorations of planning for utopian and dystopian futures; as well as comparative papers exploring the interlinking temporalities of past, present and future emergency responses and how they materialise in everyday lives. We also encourage panellists to reflect on the following: To what extent are crises actually thought to be avoidable or plannable? Is it possible to think about preparedness alongside chronic crisis? What is the relationship between crisis, critique and creativity? How can we learn from speculative imaginaries and plans of crisis scenarios?

Lecturers

Profile image for Cecilie Baann

Cecilie Baann Workshop leader

PhD fellow
Aarhus University, Department of Anthropology

Social anthropologist working on human security and livelihoods in the fishing sector in Sierra Leone

Charline Kopf Workshop leader

University of Oslo & KU Leuven

Sarah-Jane Cooper-Knock Workshop leader

Profile image for Tanja Hendriks

Tanja Hendriks Workshop leader

University of Edinburgh

Charline Kopf Presenter

University of Oslo & KU Leuven

Profile image for Emily Eyestone

Emily Eyestone Presenter

Princeton University

Profile image for Jonathan Eaton

Jonathan Eaton Presenter

PhD Candidate
University of British Columbia

Miriam Jensen Presenter

Aalborg University

Profile image for Tanja Hendriks

Tanja Hendriks Presenter

University of Edinburgh