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From rigidity traps towards reparative disaster governance and management

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BORIS DOI
10.48620/88340
Date of Publication
July 2025
Publication Type
Article
Division/Institute

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Author
Eriksen, Christineorcid-logo
Institute of Geography, Geographies of Disasters
Institute of Geography, Land Systems and Sustainable Land Management
Institute of Geography
Kirschner, Judithorcid-logo
Institute of Geography, Geographies of Disasters
Institute of Geography, Social and Cultural Geography
Simon, Gregory L.
O'Grady, Nathaniel
Uyttewaal, Kathleen
Lüthi, Samuel
Prior, Tim
Zeffiri, Filippo
Institute of Geography
Emmenegger, Rony
Ay, Denizorcid-logo
Institute of Geography, Human Geography
Institute of Geography, Political Urbanism and Sustainable Spatial Development
Institute of Geography
Chmutina, Ksenia
Raju, Emmanuel
Grove, Kevin
Subject(s)

900 - History::910 - ...

Series
International Journal of Disaster Risk Reduction
ISSN or ISBN (if monograph)
2212-4209
Publisher
Elsevier
Language
English
Publisher DOI
10.1016/j.ijdrr.2025.105603
Description
Despite widespread critique, the established notion of sequential disaster management phases (mitigation, preparedness, response, recovery) continues to inform a standard set of policies and practices that lock people into rigid cycles of decision-making and action. In this paper, we refer to these as “rigidity traps.” Although expressed in different ways, rigidity traps result in the overarching effect of maintaining the broader conditions that shape disasters and they, in turn, proliferate the consequent impact. Awareness of rigidity traps, and the resulting processes and outcomes, is critical to avoid such traps. However, alternative disaster governance and management approaches are also needed in order to move on from the status quo. To this end, we build on work by scholars to deploy ‘the reparative’ as an analytical lens. Specifically, a reparative approach seeks to account for the wider historical and systemic conditions that organize and structure the ways disasters unfold, the consequences they bear, and their uneven effects across different people and places. We use this framing as a foundation to expand upon what a reparative approach might look like when applied to disaster governance and management. We do so by identifying a range of rigidity traps, which is followed by suggestions for alternative reparative approaches, including perspectives on how to institutionalise such approaches. While each example is grounded in either a particular place or type of hazard, the collection has been chosen due to their simultaneous relevance to a broader range of people, places and hazards.
Handle
https://boris-portal.unibe.ch/handle/20.500.12422/211415
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Eriksen et al 2025 From rigidity traps towards reparative disaster governance and management.pdftextAdobe PDF858.82 KBpublishedOpen
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