
Responses to Disasters and Climate Change
Description
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Persons
Miriam S. Chaiken currently holds the position of Dean of the William Conroy Honors College at New Mexico State University and Distinguished Professor of Anthropology. She is a cultural anthropologist with decades of experience in international economic development, having conducted field research on issues of population resettlement and migration, food security and hunger, livelihoods and agricultural production, and maternal and child health. Most of this work was done in collaboration with humanitarian NGOs such as UNICEF and Save the Children. Her earliest long-term field work was on Palawan Island in the Philippines, followed by extensive work in Kenya, Ethiopia, and Mozambique.
Content
Part I: Methodology, Policy, and Early Warning Systems
Methodological Strategies and Early Warning Systems
Chapter 1: Vulnerability and Resilience to Climate Change in a Rural Coastal Community
Katherine J. Johnson, Brian Needelman, and Michael Paolisso
Chapter 2: The story of Rising Voices: facilitating collaboration between Indigenous and Western ways of knowing
Julie Maldonado, Heather Lazrus, Shiloh-Kay Bennett, Karletta Chief, Carla May Dhillon, Bob Gough, Linda Kruger, Jeff Morisette, Stefan Petrovic, and Kyle Powys Whyte
Chapter 3: Youth based learning in disaster risk reduction education: barriers and bridges to promote resilience
Victor Marchezini and Rachel Trajber
Chapter 4: Household Response to Flash Flooding in the United States and India: A Comparative Study of the 2013 Colorado and Uttarakhand Disasters
Hao-Che Wu, Sudha Arlikatti, Andrew J. Prelog, and Clayton Wukich
Chapter 5: Traditional and Contemporary Social Safety Nets in Rural Mozambique
Miriam S. Chaiken
Policy, Evaluation, and "Best Practice" Models
Chapter 6: Accessing Disaster Recovery Resource Information: Reliance on Social Capital in the Aftermath of Hurricane Sandy
Jason D. Rivera
Chapter 7: Lessons Learned from Evaluating a Leadership Development Initiative to Foster Climate Change Adaptation, Mitigation, and Resilience
Mary Ann Castle, Norma Tan, James A. LaGro, Jr.
Chapter 8: Let's Talk Oil Spill Risk: Lessons Learned from Coastal Communities in British Columbia, Canada
Shona VZ de Jong
Chapter 9: Imagining Culture: the Politics of Culturally Sensitive Reconstruction and Resilience-Building in Post-Wenchuan Earthquake China
Qiaoyun Zhang and Roberto E. Barrios
Chapter 10: The Shared Vulnerability and Resiliency of the Fukushima Animals and their Rescuers
Seven Mattes
Part II: ImpactS ON Resilience and Vulnerability
Food Security and Livelihoods
Chapter 11: Understanding Child Nutrition Preservation After an Extreme Weather Event Disaster: Lessons from Tropical Storm Ketsana and Typhoon Parma (2009) in the Philippines
Erlidia F. Llamas-Clark and Cathy Banwell
Chapter 12: Food insecurity and health disparity synergisms: Reframing a praxis of anthropology and public health for displaced populations in the United States
Preety Gadhoke and Barrett P. Brenton
Chapter 13: The Dynamics of Vulnerability and Adaptive Capacity in Southern Ethiopia
Logan Cochrane and Yishak Gecho
Chapter 14: The Production of Material Goods as Resilience Adaptation by Impelled Migrants in Malawi
Michele Companion
Gender and Social Inequality
Chapter 15: Gender Dimensions in Disaster Management: Implications for Coastal Aquaculture and Fishing Communities in the Philippines
Morgan Chow, Lori A. Cramer, and Hillary Egna
Chapter 16: Women's Leadership in a Texas Forest Fire and Recovery: How Gender Roles and Assumptions Empower and Constrain Women and Men Post-Disaster in a Rural Southern Town
Josephine Nummi and Kathryn Henderson
Chapter 17: Gender dynamics and disasters in Zimbabwe: a case of Tokwe Mukosi flooding
Catherine Bwerinofa and Manase Kudzai Chiweshe
Part III: Community-Based Factors That Impact Resilience and Vulnerability
Chapter 18: Vulnerability and Tourism Development: Fostering the Capacity of Resilience in the Context of Climate Change
Sara E. Alexander
Chapter 19: Why Isn't There a Plan? Community Vulnerability and Resilience in then Latrobe Valley's Open Cut Coal Mine Town
Michelle Duffy, Pamela Wood, Sue Whyte, Susan Yell, and Matthew Carroll
Chapter 20: Best Family Rwanda: a Case Study on Religious Sources of Resilience
Sharon Kim and David Kim
Chapter 21: Grassroots and Guerrillas: Radical and Insurgent Responses for Community Resilience
Natalie Osborn, Deanna Grant-Smith, Edward Morgan
Chapter 22: "Prepper" as Resilient Citizen: What Preppers Can Teach Us About Surviving Disasters
Chad Huddleston
Chapter 23: All the Years Combine: The Expansion and Contraction of Time and Memory in Disaster Response
A.J. Faas
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