Interruptions: imagining an analytical otherwise for disaster studies in Latin America
Autor: | Cristóbal Bonelli, Manuel Tironi, Valentina Acuña, Beltrán Undurraga, Leila Juzam, Andrés Pereira Covarrubias, Katherine Campos-Knothe, Sarah Kelly, Ricardo Rivas, Francisco Molina, Sofía Valdivieso, Enzo Isola, Marcelo González Gálvez |
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Přispěvatelé: | Anthropology of Health, Care and the Body (AISSR, FMG) |
Jazyk: | angličtina |
Rok vydání: | 2022 |
Předmět: | |
Zdroj: | Disaster Prevention and Management, 31(3), 243-259. Emerald Disaster Prevention and Management |
ISSN: | 0965-3562 |
Popis: | PurposeBased on the research, the authors identify how four key concepts in disaster studies—agency, local scale, memory and vulnerability—are interrupted, and how these interruptions offer new perspectives for doing disaster research from and for the South.Design/methodology/approachMeta-analysis of case studies and revision of past and current collaborations of authors with communities across Chile.FindingsThe findings suggest that agency, local scale, memory and vulnerability, as fundamental concepts for disaster risk reduction (DRR) theory and practice, need to allow for ambivalences, ironies, granularization and further materializations. The authors identify these characteristics as the conditions that emerge when doing disaster research from within the disaster itself, perhaps the critical condition of what is usually known as the South.Originality/valueThe authors contribute to a reflexive assessment of fundamental concepts for critical disaster studies. The authors offer research-based and empirically rich redefinitions of these concepts. The authors also offer a novel understanding of the political and epistemological conditions of the “South” as both a geography and a project. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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