Space is a feature of all disasters, and it is through decisions on how space is developed, used, and reproduced that disasters manifest themselves. Critical urban theory sees urban space—cities—as an arena of contestation expressed through the relationship between people, power, and the built environment. Cities allow for an unpacking of this process of contestation through the interpretation of various temporal, spatial, social, and physical elements that together create complex issues and ‘wicked problems’. In these urban spaces in all their complexity, disasters reveal both the worst injustices and inequalities present in a society. By drawing on three well-known cases—Hurricane Katrina in 2010; the Haiti earthquake in 2010; and the Gre...
The federal government along with many state and local governments, has gained painful, firsthand kn...
This thesis, at the intersection of urban and disaster studies, looks at the spatial component of ...
In risk management, the interventions relied on building large infrastructures (e.g. dams and dikes)...
Space is a feature of all disasters, and it is through decisions on how space is developed, used, an...
This paper asks what critical urban theory can add to the sociology of disasters. If the fundamental...
This paper asks what critical urban theory can add to the sociology of disasters. If the fundamental...
The number of megacities worldwide is rapidly increasing and contemporary cities are also expanding ...
At an accelerating rate, over half of the world’s population is living in urban centres. The catastr...
The evolution of cities, whose pattern is all but regular, is sometimes marked by rare events that m...
This paper uses the theoretical and analytical resources of critical theory to explore the processes...
‘The river was moved too close to my house!’ declared a soon-to-be-displaced resident following floo...
As cities increase in size and complexity they also become increasing vulnerable to unanticipated ev...
PurposeCities are both at risk and the cause of risk. The interconnectedness of urban features and s...
Natural disasters are devastating events. Western cities are designed to prevent or control these ev...
For millennia, the devastating consequences of natural hazards have been considered as ‘acts of God’...
The federal government along with many state and local governments, has gained painful, firsthand kn...
This thesis, at the intersection of urban and disaster studies, looks at the spatial component of ...
In risk management, the interventions relied on building large infrastructures (e.g. dams and dikes)...
Space is a feature of all disasters, and it is through decisions on how space is developed, used, an...
This paper asks what critical urban theory can add to the sociology of disasters. If the fundamental...
This paper asks what critical urban theory can add to the sociology of disasters. If the fundamental...
The number of megacities worldwide is rapidly increasing and contemporary cities are also expanding ...
At an accelerating rate, over half of the world’s population is living in urban centres. The catastr...
The evolution of cities, whose pattern is all but regular, is sometimes marked by rare events that m...
This paper uses the theoretical and analytical resources of critical theory to explore the processes...
‘The river was moved too close to my house!’ declared a soon-to-be-displaced resident following floo...
As cities increase in size and complexity they also become increasing vulnerable to unanticipated ev...
PurposeCities are both at risk and the cause of risk. The interconnectedness of urban features and s...
Natural disasters are devastating events. Western cities are designed to prevent or control these ev...
For millennia, the devastating consequences of natural hazards have been considered as ‘acts of God’...
The federal government along with many state and local governments, has gained painful, firsthand kn...
This thesis, at the intersection of urban and disaster studies, looks at the spatial component of ...
In risk management, the interventions relied on building large infrastructures (e.g. dams and dikes)...