Home and contents insurance is framed as key to Australia\u27s national strategy for disaster resilience. Despite the perceived importance of financial indemnity, ambiguity characterises the ways in which it facilitates both short- and long-term everyday household recovery when disaster strikes. Addressing such ambiguity, this article explores how insurance impacts upon households\u27 capacities to rebuild and recover after disastrous bushfire. In-depth interviews conducted with residents in the Blue Mountains of New South Wales four years after they were affected by the October 2013 bushfires show that insurance was fundamental to recovery. Swift claims handling and payouts allowed participants to access rental accommodation, material nece...
The fire season has started early. Homes were destroyed last month in bushfires near Lancefield, Vic...
The purpose of this research is to better understand community housing resilience and the role of in...
Catastrophic natural disasters such as a ‘blow-up’ bushfire have the capacity to overwhelm authoriti...
Home and contents insurance is framed as key to Australia's national strategy for disaster resilienc...
Home and contents insurance is integral to household and community resilience against disasters. Yet...
Australian households are increasingly vulnerable to natural hazard-related disasters. To manage dis...
Increasing numbers of households are impacted by disasters due to population growth, increasing deve...
Increasing numbers of households are impacted by disasters due to population growth, increasing deve...
As the climate changes and extreme weather events become more common, the role of house and contents...
Insurance is widely promoted as a vital means of resilience to climatic disasters such as floods. We...
Australian households are increasingly vulnerable to natural hazard-related disasters. To manage dis...
Australia is in the midst of a bushfire crisis that will affect local communities for years, if not ...
In this paper, I critically interrogate the expectation that insurance is becoming more present thro...
This article examines findings from a 2018 project in Cairns, Far North Queensland, on insurance and...
This chapter examines the meaning of value, and how it is calculated, among bushfire survivors in Au...
The fire season has started early. Homes were destroyed last month in bushfires near Lancefield, Vic...
The purpose of this research is to better understand community housing resilience and the role of in...
Catastrophic natural disasters such as a ‘blow-up’ bushfire have the capacity to overwhelm authoriti...
Home and contents insurance is framed as key to Australia's national strategy for disaster resilienc...
Home and contents insurance is integral to household and community resilience against disasters. Yet...
Australian households are increasingly vulnerable to natural hazard-related disasters. To manage dis...
Increasing numbers of households are impacted by disasters due to population growth, increasing deve...
Increasing numbers of households are impacted by disasters due to population growth, increasing deve...
As the climate changes and extreme weather events become more common, the role of house and contents...
Insurance is widely promoted as a vital means of resilience to climatic disasters such as floods. We...
Australian households are increasingly vulnerable to natural hazard-related disasters. To manage dis...
Australia is in the midst of a bushfire crisis that will affect local communities for years, if not ...
In this paper, I critically interrogate the expectation that insurance is becoming more present thro...
This article examines findings from a 2018 project in Cairns, Far North Queensland, on insurance and...
This chapter examines the meaning of value, and how it is calculated, among bushfire survivors in Au...
The fire season has started early. Homes were destroyed last month in bushfires near Lancefield, Vic...
The purpose of this research is to better understand community housing resilience and the role of in...
Catastrophic natural disasters such as a ‘blow-up’ bushfire have the capacity to overwhelm authoriti...