This book is a festschrift in tribute to Ben Wisner’s contributions to disaster studies and adjacent fields of scholarship such as political ecology, development, and sustainability.

This festschrift for Ben, and so The Benschrift, revitalises, promotes, and critiques a selection of six foundational articles that span Ben’s 50-year career. Each article is reproduced integrally and followed by a commentary by an expert in the field and a response from Ben. As a result, this book not only introduces a lifetime’s work to the latest generation of researchers; it also contributes a meaningful dialogue across decades of scholarship, expressing contemporary reflections alongside the understanding of how to engage with and improve past research. Two fundamental truths stand out: the value of local knowledge and the necessity of seeking root causes and radical solutions.

This book is an essential read for students, researchers, policy makers and practitioners interested in the development and evolution of disaster scholarship, political ecology, development and sustainability studies.

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This book is a festschrift in tribute to Ben Wisner’s contributions to disaster studies and adjacent fields of scholarship such as political ecology, development, and sustainability.

1. Keep Truckin': My Life As Clown, Philosopher, Activist And Radical Geographer 2. Analogies Of Vietnam In East Africa Village Life 3. The Best Of Times, The Worst Of Times: Two Commentaries On Wisner's 'Analogies Of Vietnam In East African Village Life' 4. Ben's Response To David Stea And Kristina Peterson's Commentaries: Mental Gymnastics And Boots On The Ground 5. Global Systems And Local Disasters: The Untapped Power Of People's Science 6. Reflection On 'Global Systems And Local Disasters: The Untapped Power Of Peoples' Science' 7. Ben's Response To Jake Cadag's Commentary: The Untapped Power Of Peoples' Science 8. Nutritional Consequences Of The Articulation Of Capitalist And Non-Capitalist Modes Of Production In Eastern Kenya 9. Nutrition And Post-Colonial Change In Eastern Kenya 10. Ben's Response To Terry Gibson's Commentary: Nutrition And Post-Colonial Change In Eastern Kenya 11. Disaster Vulnerability: Scale, Power And Daily Life 12. Revisiting The Past To Think About Our Roles As Scholars, Practitioners And Activists: The Importance Of 'Disaster Vulnerability: Scale, Power, And Daily Life' 13. Ben's Response To Victor Marchezini's Commentary: Daily Life (The Universe And Everything?) 14. Assessment Of Capability And Vulnerability 15. (Re)Assessing Capacity And Vulnerability 16. Ben's Response To Mihir Bhatt's Commentary 17. Speaking Truth To Power: A Personal Account Of Activist Political Ecology 18. Reflection On 'Speaking Truth To Power' 19. Ben's Response To Ksenia Chmutina's Commentary: More Thoughts On Truths And Powers - Angry, Anchored Versus Relative And Blasé 20. Book Review Forum: Spatial Histories Of Radical Geography: North America And Beyond 21. Some Political Undercurrents In Ben Wisner's Review Of Spatial Histories Of Radical Geography 22. Ben's Response To Salvadore Engel-Di Mauro's Commentary: Speaking To The Next Few Generations 23. Postscript: Letter To The Young

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Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9781032695938
Publisert
2025-10-31
Utgiver
Taylor & Francis Ltd; Routledge
Vekt
453 gr
Høyde
234 mm
Bredde
156 mm
Aldersnivå
U, P, 05, 06
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Innbundet
Antall sider
300

Om bidragsyterne

Ben Wisner is an activist scholar who finds himself tempted by nostalgia for the 70’s, 80’s and 90’s when he worked to understand and address disaster risk with civil society and local government in a number of countries in eastern and southern Africa, Asia, Latin American and the Caribbean. In his 80th decade, he watches the autumn leaves turn colour, contemplates the cycle of life, death and rebirth, and he wonders what impact his university teaching and publications have had. The warm southwest wind whispers the names of his many co-authors, co-editors and research partners. He is grateful for them all.

JC Gaillard is Ahorangi o te Matawhenua / Professor of Geography at Waipapa Taumata Rau / The University of Auckland. His work focuses on power and inclusion in disaster and disaster studies. It includes developing participatory tools for engaging minority groups in disaster risk reduction with an emphasis on cultural and gender minorities, people in detention and children. More details from: https://jcgaillard.wordpress.com.

Ilan Kelman https://www.ilankelman.org/ and Instagram/Threads/X @ILANKELMAN is Professor of Disasters and Health at University College London, England and a Professor II at the University of Agder, Kristiansand, Norway. His overall research interest is linking disasters and health, integrating climate change into both. Three main areas are: (i) disaster diplomacy and health diplomacy https://www.disasterdiplomacy.org/ ; (ii) island sustainability focusing on safe and healthy living and livelihoods https://www.islandvulnerability.org/ ; and (iii) risk education for health and disasters https://www.riskred.org/