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Why are you in disaster studies? Liberating future scholars from oppressive disaster science

Victor Marchezini (CEMADEN – National Early Warning and Monitoring Centre of Natural Disasters, São José dos Campos, Brazil)

Disaster Prevention and Management

ISSN: 0965-3562

Article publication date: 21 November 2023

Issue publication date: 28 May 2024

153

Abstract

Purpose

The question of “why we are in disaster studies” can be essential to reflect on discourses and practices – as students, researchers and professors – in constituting an oppressive disaster science and finding ways to liberate from it.

Design/methodology/approach

This paper is based on autobiographical research and institutional ethnography to observe and analyze the discourses and practices about career trajectories as students, researchers and professors in disaster studies.

Findings

The paper provides some categories, concepts, theoretical approaches and lived experiences helpful for discussing ways of liberating disaster studies, such as public sociology of disaster.

Originality/value

Few papers have focused on professional trajectories in disaster studies, bringing insights from public sociology and questioning oppressive disaster science.

Keywords

Acknowledgements

The author acknowledges the São Paulo Research Foundation – Fapesp (Grant Number 2018/06093-4) for his scholarship to serve as a visiting postdoctoral researcher at the Natural Hazards Center (NHC) at the University of Colorado Boulder, United States, between June 27, 2022 and June 26, 2023. The author also thanks Dr Lori Peek.

Citation

Marchezini, V. (2024), "Why are you in disaster studies? Liberating future scholars from oppressive disaster science", Disaster Prevention and Management, Vol. 33 No. 3, pp. 223-236. https://doi.org/10.1108/DPM-06-2023-0150

Publisher

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Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2023, Emerald Publishing Limited

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