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Sylvia Nissen, S. Carlton, J. Wong, Sam Johnson (2021)
‘Spontaneous’ volunteers? Factors enabling the Student Volunteer Army mobilisation following the Canterbury earthquakes, 2010–2011International journal of disaster risk reduction, 53
S. Uekusa (2020)
The paradox of social capital: A case of immigrants, refugees and linguistic minorities in the Canterbury and Tohoku disastersInternational journal of disaster risk reduction, 48
M. Walter, T. Kukutai, S. Carroll, D. Rodriguez-Lonebear (2020)
Indigenous Data Sovereignty and Policy
J Batt (2011)
38Kai Tiaki Nursing New Zealand, 17
R. Woods, Sara Mcbride, L. Wotherspoon, S. Beavan, S. Potter, D. Johnston, T. Wilson, D. Brunsdon, E. Grace, H. Brackley, J. Becker (2017)
Science to emergency management responseBulletin of the New Zealand National Society for Earthquake Engineering, 50
Christine Kenney, S. Phibbs (2015)
A Māori love story: Community-led disaster management in response to the Ōtautahi (Christchurch) earthquakes as a framework for actionInternational journal of disaster risk reduction, 14
Christine Kenney (2019)
Ahi Kā Roa, Ahi Kā Ora Ōtautahi: Māori, Recovery Trajectories and Resilience in Canterbury, New ZealandPopulation, Development, and the Environment
Lucy Carter, Christine Kenney (2018)
A tale of two communities: B-race-ing disaster responses in the media following the Canterbury and Kaikōura earthquakesInternational Journal of Disaster Risk Reduction
J. Stevenson, J. Becker, Nicholas Cradock-Henry, S. Johal, D. Johnston, Caroline Orchiston, E. Seville (2017)
Economic and social reconnaissanceBulletin of the New Zealand National Society for Earthquake Engineering, 50
[In the aftermath of the February 2011 Christchurch Earthquake, Māori organised rapidly to address the urgent needs and longer-term recovery concerns of the wider community. This chapter summarises the Māori community response to the Canterbury earthquake sequence, documents how Māori have leveraged on the recovery in order to implement programmes that address vulnerabilities in the areas of housing, income and employment within the Māori community. It tracks how research conducted in Ōtautahi following the 2011 earthquakes has informed local recovery initiatives, the national disaster resilience strategy, as well as responses to the Kaikōura earthquake in 2016 and the terrorist attack in 2019.]
Published: Feb 13, 2022
Keywords: Canterbury earthquake sequence; Community resilience; Disaster risk reduction; Indigenous peoples; Māori community; Māori response
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