Crisis: critical and interdisciplinary perspectives
In: Global discourse: an interdisciplinary journal of current affairs and applied contemporary thought, Band 12, Heft 3-4, S. 456-459
ISSN: 2043-7897
5 Ergebnisse
Sortierung:
In: Global discourse: an interdisciplinary journal of current affairs and applied contemporary thought, Band 12, Heft 3-4, S. 456-459
ISSN: 2043-7897
Rebuilding After Displacement: Identifying the Needs of Displaced Communities from the Perspective of the Built Environment -- Micro-narratives on People's Perception of Climate Change and its Impact on Their Livelihood and Migration: Voices from the Indigenous Aymara People in the Bolivian Andes -- From Zero to Hero? Changes in the Estonian Context for Refugees -- Challenges of Resilience Building Among Traditional Agricultural Communities Displaced by the Landslides -- Displaced Fishermen off the Coast: Impact of Multiple Hazards on Life Above the Water -- Drivers of Slow-onset Displacement in the Coastal Mid-Atlantic Region and Preferences for Receiving Locations -- Living with Landslide Risks: A Case of Resistance to Relocation Among Vulnerable Households Residing in the Kegalle District of Sri Lanka -- Internal Displacement in Nigeria: What are the Preventive Measures? -- An Architectural Analysis of Tsunami Re-settlement Villages of South of Sri Lanka -- Forced Displacement Following Reconstruction Approaches After 2005 Zarand Earthquake, Iran -- Disaster Induced Relocation of Vulnerable Households: Evidence from Planned Relocation in Sri Lanka -- How are Tamil Villages Reconstructed? Ethnography of Place-Making in Post-war Reconstruction in Sri Lanka -- Reproducing Vulnerabilities Through Forced Displacement: A Case Study of Flood Victims in Galle District, Sri Lanka -- Verticalised Slums, Governmentality and Pandemic Governance: A Critical Hermeneutical Analysis of Governance Practices in a Selected Urban High-Rise in Colombo, Sri Lanka -- Policy Recommendations for Built Environment Professional Bodies in Upgrading their Professional Competencies to Address Displacement Contexts -- Socio-economic Effects of War Against Terror Induced Displacement on Host Communities in District Kohat, Pakistan -- Social Capital and Community Organizing in Community-Based COVID-19 Management in Two Resettlement Sites in the Philippines -- A Guideline for Host Communities in Selecting Effective Livelihood's Interventions for Refugees in An Informal Refugee Resettlement: A Case Study of Chiang Mai Province, Thailand -- Changes in Social Capital After the 2011 Great East Japan Earthquake - Results of an Awareness Survey in Taro district, Miyako City, Iwate Prefecture -- The Role of Social Capital as a Post-Relocation Coping Mechanism: A Case Study of Kegalle, Sri Lanka -- Relocated or Displaced? A Social Inquiry of Tsunami Induced Relocation Programme in Southern Sri Lanka -- Migrants and Resettlement: Mobilising Co-Existence through Social Cohesion.
In: Global discourse: an interdisciplinary journal of current affairs and applied contemporary thought, Band 12, Heft 3-4, S. 465-486
ISSN: 2043-7897
In the world we live in today, the presence and claims of crisis abound – from climate change, financial and political crisis to depression, livelihoods and personal security crisis. There is a challenge to studying crisis due to the ways in which crisis as a notion, condition and experience refers to and operates at various societal levels. Further, different kinds of crisis can overlap and intersect with each other, and act as precursors or consequences of other crises, in what can be thought of as inter-crisis relations or chains of crises. This article makes an enquiry into how to develop more adequate analytical tools for understanding crisis as a multidimensional phenomenon. We ask how crisis can be conceptualised and what the analytical potentials of a distinct crisis perspective might be? In this article we suggest a multi- and interdisciplinary approach to bridge between traditionally separated realms. Our ambition is to present a case for the development of Interdisciplinary Crisis Studies as a field of scholarly enquiry, which allows for new perspectives on data collection and analysis. Using the cases of, first, crisis and security and, second, crisis and climate, conflict and migration, we illustrate how studying and intervening in crises requires non-linear approaches which connect across disciplines to develop more comprehensive, interdisciplinary understandings of societal problems and better solutions. In concluding the paper, we assert that key features of Interdisciplinary Crisis Studies must include (1) temporality, spatiality and scale; (2) multi-layeredness, processuality and contradictions; and (3) gender, intersectionality and social inequalities.
In: PDISAS-D-23-00085
SSRN
In: Progress in disaster science, Band 20, S. 100298
ISSN: 2590-0617