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  • Post-disaster social recovery: disaster governance lessons learnt from Tropical Cyclone Yasi

    Author(s)
    Serrao-Neumann, Silvia
    Crick, Florence
    Choy, Darryl Low
    Griffith University Author(s)
    Low Choy, Darryl C.
    Year published
    2018
    Metadata
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    Abstract
    Post-disaster social recovery remains the least understood of the disaster phases despite increased risks of extreme events leading to disasters due to climate change. This paper contributes to advance this knowledge by focusing on the disaster recovery process of the Australian coastal town of Cardwell which was affected by category 4/5 Tropical Cyclone Yasi in 2011. Drawing on empirical data collected through semi-structured interviews with Cardwell residents post-Yasi, it examines issues related to social recovery in the first year of the disaster and 2 years later. Key findings discuss the role played by community members, ...
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    Post-disaster social recovery remains the least understood of the disaster phases despite increased risks of extreme events leading to disasters due to climate change. This paper contributes to advance this knowledge by focusing on the disaster recovery process of the Australian coastal town of Cardwell which was affected by category 4/5 Tropical Cyclone Yasi in 2011. Drawing on empirical data collected through semi-structured interviews with Cardwell residents post-Yasi, it examines issues related to social recovery in the first year of the disaster and 2 years later. Key findings discuss the role played by community members, volunteers and state actors in Cardwell’s post-disaster social recovery, especially with respect to how current disaster risk management trends based on self-reliance and shared responsibility unfolded in the recovery phase. Lessons learnt concerning disaster recovery governance are then extracted to inform policy implementation for disaster risk management to support social recovery and enhance disaster resilience in the light of climate change.
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    Journal Title
    Natural Hazards
    Volume
    93
    Issue
    3
    DOI
    https://doi.org/10.1007/s11069-018-3345-5
    Subject
    Atmospheric sciences
    Physical geography and environmental geoscience
    Physical geography and environmental geoscience not elsewhere classified
    Psychology
    Disaster risk reduction
    Natural hazards
    Resilience
    Australia
    Self-reliance
    Shared responsibility
    Publication URI
    http://hdl.handle.net/10072/381830
    Collection
    • Journal articles

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