The national recovery principles state that disaster recovery should be community-led. However, reports from various recovery processes in Australia and overseas consistently identify that governments too often, in practice, do not support this. This research examines ways in which governments can enable communities to lead their recovery after emergency events. This is a preliminary report of a continuing study. To date, semi-structured interviews have been held with over 20 experienced individuals about their involvement in community recovery. Participants are community members from disaster-affected communities, government employees from all levels of government and across departments, and representatives from community sector organisati...
Aim: Natural disasters inflict significant trauma upon the individuals and communities in which they...
Disaster management literature is inundated with rhetoric about 'community participation' ...
© 2015, Public Library of Science. All Rights Reserved. Aim: Natural disasters inflict significant t...
The national recovery principles state that disaster recovery should be community-led. However, repo...
On September the 4th 2010, and February 22nd 2011, the Canterbury region of New Zealand was shaken b...
Due in part to the increase in frequency and intensity of extreme weather events in Australia, emerg...
In 2009, after extremely severe bushfires in Victoria, Australia, social welfare agencies initiated ...
Through nonrandom purposive sampling, this article examines the ways three Catholic agencies offered...
Though there is strong agreement in the literature that community participation in disaster recovery...
The aim of this paper is to investigate the views about community on their participation during disa...
As Australian state and federal governments extol the importance of resilience-building in rural com...
Through nonrandom purposive sampling, this article examines the ways three Catholic agencies offered...
After fires swept through the lower Blue Mountains of NSW in October 2013 and destroyed over 200 hom...
This thesis examines how place-based community organisations can play an effective role in the opera...
This paper reports one of four case studies that are part of a larger study aimed at identifying ind...
Aim: Natural disasters inflict significant trauma upon the individuals and communities in which they...
Disaster management literature is inundated with rhetoric about 'community participation' ...
© 2015, Public Library of Science. All Rights Reserved. Aim: Natural disasters inflict significant t...
The national recovery principles state that disaster recovery should be community-led. However, repo...
On September the 4th 2010, and February 22nd 2011, the Canterbury region of New Zealand was shaken b...
Due in part to the increase in frequency and intensity of extreme weather events in Australia, emerg...
In 2009, after extremely severe bushfires in Victoria, Australia, social welfare agencies initiated ...
Through nonrandom purposive sampling, this article examines the ways three Catholic agencies offered...
Though there is strong agreement in the literature that community participation in disaster recovery...
The aim of this paper is to investigate the views about community on their participation during disa...
As Australian state and federal governments extol the importance of resilience-building in rural com...
Through nonrandom purposive sampling, this article examines the ways three Catholic agencies offered...
After fires swept through the lower Blue Mountains of NSW in October 2013 and destroyed over 200 hom...
This thesis examines how place-based community organisations can play an effective role in the opera...
This paper reports one of four case studies that are part of a larger study aimed at identifying ind...
Aim: Natural disasters inflict significant trauma upon the individuals and communities in which they...
Disaster management literature is inundated with rhetoric about 'community participation' ...
© 2015, Public Library of Science. All Rights Reserved. Aim: Natural disasters inflict significant t...