Hazards, Social Resilience, and Safer Futures

L. Dominelli
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Abstract

The concepts of hazards and risks began in engineering when scientists were measuring the points at which materials would become sufficiently stressed by the pressures upon them that they would break. These concepts migrated into the environmental sciences to assess risk in the natural terrain, including the risks that human activities posed to the survival of animals (including fish in streams) and plants in the biosphere. From there, they moved to the social sciences, primarily in formal disaster discourses. With the realization that modern societies constantly faced risks cushioned in uncertainties within everyday life, the media popularized the concept of risk and its accoutrements, including mitigation, adaptation, and preventative measures, among the general populace. A crucial manifestation of this is the media’s accounts of the risks affecting different groups of people or places contracting Covid-19, which burst upon a somnambulant world in December 2019 in Wuhan, China. The World Health Organization (WHO) declared Covid-19 a pandemic on March 11, 2020. Politicians of diverse hues sought to reassure nervous inhabitants that they had followed robust, scientific advice on risks to facilitate “flattening the curve” by spreading the rate of infection in different communities over a longer period to reduce demand for public health services. Definitions of hazard, risk, vulnerability, and resilience evolved as they moved from the physical sciences into everyday life to reassure edgy populations that their social systems, especially the medical ones, could cope with the demands of disasters. While most countries have managed the risk Covid-19 posed to health services, this has been at a price that people found difficult to accept. Instead, as they reflected upon their experiences of being confronted with the deaths of many loved ones, especially among elders in care homes; adversities foisted upon the disease’s outcomes by existing social inequalities; and loss of associative freedoms, many questioned whether official mitigation strategies were commensurate with apparent risks. The public demanded an end to such inequities and questioned the bases on which politicians made their decisions. They also began to search for certainties in the social responses to risk in the hopes of building better futures as other institutions, schools, and businesses went into lockdown, and social relationships and people’s usual interactions with others ceased. For some, it seemed as if society were crumbling around them, and they wanted a better version of their world to replace the one devastated by Covid-19 (or other disasters). Key to this better version was a safer, fairer, more equitable and reliable future. Responses to the risks within Covid-19 scenarios are similar to responses to other disasters, including earthquakes, volcanic eruptions, wildfires, tsunamis, storms, extreme weather events, and climate change. The claims of “building back better” are examined through a resilience lens to determine whether such demands are realizable, and if not, what hinders their realization. Understanding such issues will facilitate identification of an agenda for future research into mitigation, adaptation, and preventative measures necessary to protect people and the planet Earth from the harm of subsequent disasters.
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危险、社会恢复力和更安全的未来
危害和风险的概念开始于工程领域,当时科学家们正在测量材料在压力下会受到足够的压力而破裂的点。这些概念逐渐进入环境科学,以评估自然地形的风险,包括人类活动对动物(包括溪流中的鱼类)和生物圈中植物的生存构成的风险。从那里,他们转向社会科学,主要是在正式的灾难论述中。由于认识到现代社会经常面临日常生活中不确定因素所缓冲的风险,媒体在普通民众中普及了风险概念及其装备,包括减轻、适应和预防措施。这一点的一个关键表现是媒体对感染Covid-19的不同人群或地方的风险的报道。2019年12月,Covid-19在中国武汉突然出现在一个飘飘然的世界。世界卫生组织(世卫组织)于2020年3月11日宣布新冠肺炎为大流行。形形色色的政客试图安抚紧张的居民,称他们遵循了强有力的科学风险建议,通过在较长时间内将感染率分散到不同社区,以减少对公共卫生服务的需求,从而促进“曲线趋平”。危害、风险、脆弱性和恢复力的定义随着它们从物理科学转移到日常生活中而不断演变,以使焦虑的人群确信,他们的社会体系,特别是医疗体系,能够应对灾害的需求。虽然大多数国家已经控制了Covid-19对卫生服务构成的风险,但这付出了人们难以接受的代价。相反,当他们反思自己面对许多亲人死亡的经历时,尤其是在养老院的老年人中;现有的社会不平等给疾病带来的逆境;对于结社自由的丧失,许多人质疑官方的缓解战略是否与明显的风险相称。公众要求结束这种不公平现象,并质疑政治家做出决策的依据。随着其他机构、学校和企业进入封锁状态,社会关系和人们与他人的日常互动停止,他们也开始在社会对风险的反应中寻找确定性,希望建立更美好的未来。对一些人来说,他们周围的社会似乎正在崩溃,他们想要一个更好的世界来取代被Covid-19(或其他灾难)摧毁的世界。实现这个更好版本的关键是一个更安全、更公平、更公平和更可靠的未来。应对2019冠状病毒病情景下的风险与应对其他灾害(包括地震、火山爆发、野火、海啸、风暴、极端天气事件和气候变化)类似。“重建得更好”的主张通过弹性透镜来检验,以确定这些要求是否可以实现,如果不能,是什么阻碍了它们的实现。了解这些问题将有助于确定未来研究的议程,以研究保护人民和地球免受随后灾害的危害所必需的缓解、适应和预防措施。
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