ABSTRACT

We think vulnerability still matters when considering how people are put at risk from hazards and this book shows why in a series of thematic chapters and case studies written by eminent disaster studies scholars that deal with the politics of disaster risk creation: precarity, conflict, and climate change.

The chapters highlight different aspects of vulnerability and disaster risk creation, placing the stress rightly on what causes disasters and explaining the politics of how they are created through a combination of human interference with natural processes, the social production of vulnerability, and the neglect of response capacities. Importantly, too, the book provides a platform for many of those most prominently involved in launching disaster studies as a social discipline to reflect on developments over the past 50 years and to comment on current trends.

The interdisciplinary and historical perspective that this book provides will appeal to scholars and practitioners at both the national and international level seeking to study, develop, and support effective social protection strategies to prevent or mitigate the effects of hazards on vulnerable populations. It will also prove an invaluable reference work for students and all those interested in the future safety of the world we live in.

chapter 1|12 pages

Introduction

Why vulnerability still matters 1

part I|75 pages

Why vulnerability still matters

chapter 2|18 pages

Remaking the world in our own image

Vulnerability, resilience, and adaptation as historical discourses 1

chapter 3|18 pages

Between precarity and the security state

A post-vulnerability view

part II|79 pages

Vulnerability, conflict, and state–society relations

chapter 6|16 pages

Disaster studies and its discontents

The postcolonial state in hazard and risk creation

chapter 7|18 pages

Humanitarianism

Navigating between resilience and vulnerability 1

chapter 9|25 pages

Vulnerability and resilience in a complex and chaotic context

Evidence from Mozambique

part III|69 pages

Disaster risk creation

chapter 10|21 pages

Power writ small and large

How disaster cannot be understood without reference to pushing, pulling, coercing, and seducing

chapter 11|14 pages

Disaster risk creation

The new vulnerability

chapter 12|16 pages

Vulnerable Anthropocenes?

Towards an integrated approach

chapter 13|16 pages

‘The hottest summer ever!’

Exploring vulnerability to climate change among grain producers in Eastern Norway