Editors:
- Examines the concept of Disaster Justice as framing disasters as a social and governance issue
- Considers all stages of the disaster management cycle – preparation, response and recovery
- Offers a comprehensive synthesis of the intersection of disaster and justice written from a variety of disciplinary perspectives, grounded in real world case studies
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Table of contents (18 chapters)
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Front Matter
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Introduction
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Front Matter
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Governance
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Front Matter
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Vulnerability and Resilience
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Front Matter
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About this book
This book explores policy, legal, and practice implications regarding the emerging field of disaster justice, using case studies of floods, bushfires, heatwaves, and earthquakes in Australia and Southern and South-east Asia. It reveals geographic locational and social disadvantage and structural inequities that lead to increased risk and vulnerability to disaster, and which impact ability to recover post-disaster. Written by multidisciplinary disaster researchers, the book addresses all stages of the disaster management cycle, demonstrating or recommending just approaches to preparation, response and recovery. It notably reveals how procedural, distributional and interactional aspects of justice enhance resilience, and offers a cutting edge analysis of disaster justice for managers, policy makers, researchers in justice, climate change or emergency management.
Reviews
“I congratulate the editors and contributing authors for a comprehensive, insightful, diverse and provocative book. In an age of unprecedented opportunity to shape our future whilst at the same time creating unprecedented risks that threaten to destroy our existence, disaster justice must play a key role in striking the balance for a safer, prosperous, equitable and sustainable world. This book represents some of the most dynamic thinking in the relationship between disaster justice and resilience, risk reduction and climate. It provides great appeal for all public and private policy makers, strategists and tacticians to escalate disaster justice as a central ethical consideration. It is a must read for everyone.” (Mark Crossweller, Former Director General, Emergency Management Australia, and Head of the National Resilience Taskforce)
“In this tour de force of a text – the Editors and their contributing authors shine a new light through the lens of ‘disaster justice’ to help us better understand the theoretical andpractical underpinnings of how ‘injustice plays out in places, on people and communities, on different systems and scales and in response to varying types of natural hazard’. These insights provide powerful new ways to unpack the circumstances surrounding the underlying principles of vulnerability and offer up new solutions to tackling ever increasingly complex threats to Australia and her neighbours. This text is of high value not just to students, researchers and teachers of hazard and disaster, but also for emergency service organisations that plan for and respond to disasters and for policy makers.” (Dale Dominey-Howes, Professor of Hazard and Disaster Risk Sciences, The University of Sydney, Australia)
Editors and Affiliations
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Fenner School of Environment and Society and Institute for Integrated Research on Disaster Risk Science, Australian National University, Canberra, Australia
Anna Lukasiewicz
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Urban Design and Town Planning and Sustainability Research Centre, University of the Sunshine Coast, Maroochydore, Australia
Claudia Baldwin
About the editors
Anna Lukasiewicz is an Honorary Lecturer at the Fenner School for Environment and Society, in the Australian National University, Australia. With an interdisciplinary background focusing on sustainability, Anna has been developing the Social Justice Framework, an empirically-grounded guide for incorporating justice and fairness into environmental and natural resource management.
Claudia Baldwin is Associate Professor, University of the Sunshine Coast, Australia. With over 25 years of experience in government and consulting, Claudia teaches land-use planning and researches in community resilience; water, coastal, rural, and regional planning; climate change adaptation planning; as well as age and ability-friendly communities.
Bibliographic Information
Book Title: Natural Hazards and Disaster Justice
Book Subtitle: Challenges for Australia and Its Neighbours
Editors: Anna Lukasiewicz, Claudia Baldwin
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/978-981-15-0466-2
Publisher: Palgrave Macmillan Singapore
eBook Packages: Social Sciences, Social Sciences (R0)
Copyright Information: The Editor(s) (if applicable) and The Author(s), under exclusive license to Springer Nature Singapore Pte Ltd. 2020
Hardcover ISBN: 978-981-15-0465-5Published: 25 January 2020
Softcover ISBN: 978-981-15-0468-6Published: 26 August 2021
eBook ISBN: 978-981-15-0466-2Published: 24 January 2020
Edition Number: 1
Number of Pages: XL, 368
Number of Illustrations: 10 b/w illustrations
Topics: Environmental Sociology, Human Geography, Environmental Policy, Environmental Law/Policy/Ecojustice