- 34 minutes 4 secondsS10E8 - The Philippines, Vietnam, and Engaged Ways of Knowing Disaster
Episode overview
Episode 8 continues Season 10’s regional focus by turning to Southeast Asia, with a conversation centered on the Philippines and Vietnam. This episode brings together political sociology, disaster mental health, Buddhism, and grassroots practice to examine disasters as products of political systems, colonial legacies, and relational breakdowns—and to explore what engaged, justice-oriented alternatives might look like.Hosts
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Jason von Meding
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Ksenia Chmutina
Guests
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Jake Cadag — Assistant Professor, University of the Philippines; scholar of community participation, postcolonial disaster studies, and grassroots disaster risk reduction
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Caroline Contillo — disaster researcher, resilience trainer, and disaster mental health practitioner; lead trainer with the New York Office of Mental Health
Key themes
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Postcolonial and Indigenous ways of knowing disasters
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Disaster, authoritarianism, and political repression
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Activism, scholarship, and public sociology
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Buddhism, interdependence, and socially engaged practice
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Mutual aid, disaster mental health, and collective recovery
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Disaster risk creation through development and infrastructure
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Moving beyond reformism toward structural change
Core discussion highlights
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Jake Cadag reflects on rediscovering Filipino-language scholarship and postcolonial social science, emphasizing reclamation rather than rejection of global knowledge.
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Disaster is framed as inseparable from political economy, authoritarian governance, and long-standing systems of marginalization in the Philippines.
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Jake discusses Walden Bello as a public sociologist whose work connects development, dictatorship, and disaster risk creation, and whose activism illustrates the risks scholars face under repressive regimes.
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The conversation highlights how political persecution and “red-tagging” of NGOs and academics can depoliticize disaster risk reduction and weaken grassroots participation.
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Caroline Contillo introduces Thích Nhất Hạnh as a thinker whose concept of interbeing challenges the idea of detached, objective disaster research.
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Socially engaged Buddhism is discussed as a framework for witnessing suffering without withdrawal—and for allowing compassionate action to emerge from that witnessing.
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Mutual aid and disaster mental health are explored through relational perspectives, including interpersonal neurobiology and community-based recovery.
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The episode challenges “bounce back” versions of resilience, arguing instead for recovery that confronts structural violence, inequality, and capitalism.
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Both guests emphasize that disasters reveal deeper systemic failures—and that meaningful recovery requires political engagement, not neutrality.
1 January 2026, 2:54 pm -
- 34 minutes 48 secondsS10E7 - Japan, Radical Thought, and the Politics of Disaster
Episode overview
Episode 7 continues Season 10’s regional focus with an in-depth conversation on Japan. Drawing on political theory, radical history, and long-term engagement with disaster-affected communities, the episode examines how Japanese intellectual traditions—often overlooked in disaster studies—help illuminate power, vulnerability, governance, and the social contracts that underpin disaster risk.Hosts
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Jason von Meding
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Ksenia Chmutina
Guests
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Chris Gomez — Professor at Kobe University; head of the Sabo Laboratory; scholar of sediment-related hazards, ethical disaster management, and interdisciplinary disaster research
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Wes Cheek — Assistant Professor of Emergency Management, Massachusetts Maritime Academy; scholar of community, post-disaster reconstruction, and urban theory
Key themes
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Japan as a site of rich but underexplored disaster thinking
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Reading beyond disaster studies: political theory, history, anarchism, and Marxism
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Social contracts, sovereignty, and disaster as rupture
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Infrastructure, concrete, and the political economy of risk
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Radical alternatives in Japanese history
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Disaster, authoritarianism, and state violence
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Hope, resistance, and refusal in dark times
Core discussion highlights
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Chris Gomez reflects on returning to classic political theory, particularly Hobbes, to rethink disaster as a breaking point in the social contract between the state and communities.
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The discussion situates Japan’s long reliance on concrete-heavy disaster infrastructure within broader histories of governance, economic stability, and political legitimacy.
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Chris introduces Masao Akagi, often described as the “father of Sabo,” emphasizing how engineering practice, drawings, and material interventions function as forms of knowledge alongside academic texts.
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The episode challenges narrow definitions of scholarship, arguing that disaster knowledge is produced through multiple modalities, not only words and citations.
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Wes Cheek discusses Ōsugi Sakae as a key figure of Japan’s Taishō period, highlighting a moment when alternative political futures—anarchist, socialist, anti-authoritarian—were still possible.
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The conversation explores how the Great Kantō Earthquake was used as cover for state violence, repression, and the targeting of leftists and ethnic Koreans.
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Marxism is discussed as a crucial starting point for disaster scholarship, particularly for understanding vulnerability, power, and the non-natural origins of inequality.
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Both guests reflect on contemporary Japan, including demographic decline, economic contraction, tourism, immigration, and the rise of nationalist and exclusionary politics.
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Disasters are framed not only as physical events but as moments that expose deeper social fractures, discrimination, and political choices.
1 January 2026, 2:27 pm -
- 43 minutes 20 secondsS10E6 - Latin America, the Caribbean, and Plural Worlds of Disaster Thinking
Episode overview
Episode 6 marks a shift in Season 10 from thematic conversations to regional perspectives, focusing on Latin America (and the Caribbean) as rich sites of critical disaster thinking. The episode foregrounds intellectual traditions that challenge Eurocentric assumptions in disaster studies and emphasizes plurality, dialogue, and the politics of knowledge production.Hosts
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Jason von Meding
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Ksenia Chmutina
Guests
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Giovanni Gugg — cultural anthropologist and lecturer in urban anthropology, working on risk cultures, disaster response, and activism in vulnerable urban territories
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Anna Süsina — Lecturer in Media and Creative Industries, Loughborough University; scholar of communication, social change, participatory media, and power asymmetries
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Victor Marchezini — sociologist at the Brazilian Early Warning Center and professor at INPE; leading voice in the sociology of disasters in Brazil
Key themes
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Latin American and Indigenous intellectual traditions in disaster studies
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Reading beyond English-language and Eurocentric canons
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Development, coloniality, and the production of vulnerability
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Plural futures, pluriverses, and alternative ontologies
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Dialogue, pedagogy, and critical hope
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Translation, language, and epistemic justice
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Activism, civic responsibility, and scholarship
Core discussion highlights
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Guests reflect on their reading practices, emphasizing podcasts, oral traditions, hard-copy books, and texts emerging from social movements, Indigenous communities, and Latin American critical scholarship.
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Victor Marchezini discusses the influence of Paulo Freire, highlighting dialogue, pedagogy, oppression in everyday life, and the importance of critical hope in teaching, research, and disaster practice.
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Giovanni explores Arturo Escobar’s critique of development and his concept of the pluriverse, applying it to disaster risk and urbanization around Mount Vesuvius. Disaster planning is framed as a cultural and political process, not only a technical one.
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Anna Süsina reflects on Indigenous thinking through Ailton Krenak, emphasizing relational worldviews, the human–non-human relationship, and the idea that the dominant relationship with Earth is itself a disaster.
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The conversation challenges the asymmetry between “scientific” and Indigenous knowledge, arguing for equal legitimacy and meaningful translation rather than extraction or tokenism.
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Translation is discussed as both a political challenge and a creative possibility—across languages, disciplines, generations, and even between humans and non-humans.
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The guests collectively stress the dangers of time compression in disaster scholarship, where urgency crowds out long-term thinking, historical analysis, and ethical engagement.
31 December 2025, 3:58 pm -
- 38 minutes 36 secondsS10E5 - Black Power, Black Scholarship, and Disaster Justice
Episode overview
Episode 5 centers Black power and Black scholarship as foundational to understanding disasters, vulnerability, resistance, and justice. Through a wide-ranging conversation grounded in lived experience, political struggle, and long-term community engagement, the episode examines how Black intellectual traditions reshape how disasters are understood, studied, and responded to.Hosts
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Jason von Meding
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Ksenia Chmutina
Guests
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Danielle Rivera — Assistant Professor of Landscape Architecture and Environmental Planning, UC Berkeley; scholar of environmental and climate justice working with rural and unincorporated marginalized communities
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Dewald van Niekerk — Professor at North-West University (South Africa); founder and editor-in-chief of Jàmbá: Journal of Disaster Risk Studies; leading scholar of disaster risk in Southern Africa
Key themes
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Black scholarship as central—not peripheral—to disaster studies
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Structural racism, historicity, and the “disaster before the disaster”
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Community resistance, agency, and epistemologies of survival
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Ubuntu, mutual support, and collective responsibility
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Rejecting colorblind and event-focused disaster narratives
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Long-term engagement versus extractive disaster research
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Bridging scholarship, practice, and policy
Core discussion highlights
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Danielle Rivera discusses Clyde Woods’ work on the Mississippi Delta, emphasizing the importance of deep, place-based scholarship that traces disasters through long histories of structural racism, political economy, and resistance.
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Woods’ concept of “the disaster before the disaster” is explored as a way of understanding disasters as outcomes of deliberate abandonment and plantation logics rather than isolated failures or surprises.
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The conversation challenges dominant disaster narratives that center elite losses while marginalizing the experiences of poorer and racialized communities.
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Dewald van Niekerk reflects on his engagement with Black Consciousness thought and the work of Mamphela Ramphele, highlighting kindness, dignity, and community as starting points for resilience.
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Ubuntu is discussed as a philosophy emphasizing interdependence, shared humanity, and collective problem-solving—offering important lessons for disaster risk reduction and recovery.
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Both guests critique paternalistic and technocratic approaches to disaster management, arguing for community-led, non-extractive, and context-sensitive engagement.
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The episode reflects on the evolution of disaster studies, calling for deeper interdisciplinarity, stronger links between theory and practice, and greater honesty about power, inequality, and history.
31 December 2025, 3:22 pm -
- 38 minutes 54 secondsS10E4 - Anarchism, Mutual Aid, and Disaster Politics
Episode overview
Episode 4 turns to anarchism as a lens for rethinking disasters, governance, and collective action. Through a rich conversation grounded in political theory, history, and pacifism, the episode explores how anarchist ideas—particularly mutual aid, nonviolence, and suspicion of centralized authority—offer critical insights into disaster risk, response, and recovery.Hosts
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Jason von Meding
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Ksenia Chmutina
Guests
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Ruth Kinna — professor of political theory and historian of ideas, specialist in anarchism, utopianism, and activism
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Alex Christoyannopoulos — reader in Politics and International Relations, specialist in anarcho-pacifism, Tolstoy, and religious anarchism
Key themes
-
Anarchism as a political and ethical framework for disaster thinking
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Mutual aid as solidarity, not service delivery
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Violence, nonviolence, and the role of the state in producing harm
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Bottom-up governance, trust, and community agency
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Climate change, adaptation, and early anarchist thought
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Appropriation of radical ideas by states and institutions
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Resilience, care, and the politics of responsibility
Core discussion highlights
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Ruth Kinna discusses Peter Kropotkin’s theory of mutual aid and its relevance to disasters, emphasizing cooperation, interdependence, and locally rooted knowledge.
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The conversation reframes disasters as moments that expose existing power relations, where mutual aid often outperforms slow or absent state responses—especially in marginalized communities.
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Kropotkin’s early engagement with environmental change and food security is explored, highlighting his concern with climate, production, migration, and adaptation well before contemporary climate discourse.
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Alex Christoyannopoulos reflects on Leo Tolstoy’s anarcho-pacifism, focusing on violence as a structural feature of the state and on moral responsibility, complicity, and refusal.
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Nonviolence is discussed not only as a moral stance but as a practical foundation for community resilience, collective decision-making, and resistance.
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Both guests critique the appropriation of concepts like mutual aid, care, and resilience by governments and institutions, arguing that such moves often strip these ideas of their political substance.
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The episode challenges disaster scholars to take seriously activism, disobedience, and bottom-up organizing as central—rather than peripheral—to disaster risk and response.
28 December 2025, 3:25 pm -
- 50 minutes 22 secondsS10E3 - Urbanism, Technology, Space, and the Invention of Catastrophe
Episode overview
Episode 3 expands Season 10’s exploration of Contemplating Catastrophe with a wide-ranging conversation on urbanism, technology, space, and time. The episode brings together historical, geographical, and critical perspectives to examine how disasters are produced, anticipated, governed, and lived—often long before any so-called “event” occurs.Hosts
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Jason von Meding
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Ksenia Chmutina
Guests
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Zachary Loeb — historian of technology and disasters, Purdue University
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Kevin Grove — professor of geography, Florida International University
Key themes
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Technology, risk, and the invention of new forms of catastrophe
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Urbanism and disaster as historically produced conditions
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Reading beyond disaster studies: technology critique, political geography, Black studies, and Caribbean thought
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Space, time, and temporality in disaster scholarship
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Warnings, prediction, and why societies fail to listen
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Power, knowledge, and whose experiences of space and time count
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Interdisciplinarity as a core strength of disaster studies
Core discussion highlights
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Zachary Loeb reflects on how critiques of technology—shaped by thinkers like Lewis Mumford and Paul Virilio—frame disasters as built into technological systems themselves, rather than accidental failures.
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The idea that every technological invention also invents its own accident becomes a lens for understanding contemporary risks, including digital infrastructure and artificial intelligence.
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Kevin Grove discusses how moments of discomfort and contradiction in fieldwork can become catalysts for deeper theoretical engagement, particularly through biopolitics, Caribbean studies, and Black geographies.
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Edward Soja and Doreen Massey are explored as thinkers who radically reshaped how scholars understand space, difference, and the politics of knowledge production.
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The episode challenges linear disaster timelines by introducing multiple, co-existing temporalities—slow disaster, repetition, duration, and suspended presents—especially as experienced by marginalized communities.
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Space is framed as lively, relational, and unfinished, while time is shown to be unevenly distributed and historically produced through violence, colonialism, and capitalism.
28 December 2025, 2:31 pm -
- 43 minutes 13 secondsS10E2 - Feminism, Listening, and Disaster Justice
Episode overview
Episode 2 continues Season 10’s thematic journey with a focused conversation on feminism and disaster studies. The discussion explores how feminist thinking reshapes disaster scholarship and practice, challenges dominant canons, and opens space for listening, care, solidarity, and justice-oriented research.Hosts
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Jason von Meding
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Ksenia Chmutina
Guests
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Kaira Zoe Alburo-Cañete — Filipino feminist scholar, Senior Researcher at the Humanitarian Studies Centre (ISS, Erasmus University Rotterdam)
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Susamma Seeley — crisis and disaster human services specialist; PhD candidate in Disaster Science and Management (University of Delaware)
Key themes
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Feminism as a pathway for expanding disaster scholarship
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Reading, curiosity, and discovery beyond disciplinary canons
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Privilege, access, and barriers to knowledge production
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Listening, hearing, and acting on marginalized voices
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Feminist methodologies: reflexivity, positionality, care, and solidarity
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Decolonial and postcolonial feminist perspectives
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The personal, emotional, and everyday dimensions of disasters
Core discussion highlights
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Guests reflect on their reading trajectories and how lived experience, storytelling, and curiosity shape feminist scholarship.
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Feminism is discussed not as a single framework but as a diverse set of approaches that open space for multiple voices, emotions, and forms of knowledge.
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Kaira Alburo-Cañete discusses bell hooks, emphasizing feminist standpoint epistemology, intersectionality, marginality as a site of resistance, and the role of love, care, and solidarity in disaster research.
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Susamma Seeley discusses Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak, focusing on subalternity, listening as a political act, and the challenge of creating spaces where marginalized voices can be heard and acted upon.
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The conversation highlights reading as a collective, social practice—through discussion, listening (including audiobooks), and shared curiosity.
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Participants reflect on how feminist and decolonial perspectives can inform more equitable research partnerships, especially across Global North–Global South contexts.
27 December 2025, 5:07 pm -
- 42 minutes 22 secondsS10E1 - Contemplating Catastrophe: Thinkers, Theory, and Keeping Disaster Studies Alive
Episode overview
Season 10 opens with a live conversation setting the intellectual frame for a new series built around Contemplating Catastrophe, an edited collection of short essays engaging thinkers outside conventional disaster studies. The episode reflects on why reading beyond the field matters, how theory reshapes practice, and why eclectic, critical scholarship is essential for the future of disaster research.Hosts
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Jason von Meding
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Ksenia Chmutina
Guests
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A.J. Faas — anthropologist and disaster scholar
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J.C. Gaillard — geographer and disaster researcher
Key themes
-
Why disaster studies must continually read beyond itself
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Theory as a way to unsettle settled ideas, not as abstraction for its own sake
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Eclecticism, curiosity, and “thinking with” rather than “thinking about” communities
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The limits of normative frameworks (e.g., vulnerability, “no natural disasters”)
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How critical theory informs practice, not just scholarship
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The importance of non-Anglophone, non-Western, and untranslated bodies of thought
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Creating intellectual space for early-career researchers to take theoretical risks
Core discussion highlights
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Introduction to Contemplating Catastrophe, a collection of short essays on thinkers who shape disaster thinking indirectly—philosophers, artists, theorists, and writers outside the field.
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A.J. Faas discusses reading across philosophy, literature, anthropology, and history to keep thought “lively,” and reflects on how Gramsci and Santiago Castro-Gómez help disaster scholars rethink power, hegemony, and relationality.
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J.C. Gaillard reflects on frustration with disaster practice as a driver for engaging critical theory, particularly Foucault, and argues that theory liberates practice rather than distracting from it.
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Shared concern that dominant concepts can silence alternative ontologies and lived realities if left unexamined.
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A collective call to broaden disaster scholarship beyond Euro-American traditions and to value thinkers writing in other languages and contexts.
Season 10 structure
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Live episodes recorded through 2025, archived on our Youtube channel!
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Thematic episodes planned on feminism, urbanism, anarchism, Black power, Latin American and Caribbean thought, East and Southeast Asian intellectual traditions, and Eastern philosophies.
27 December 2025, 4:43 pm -
- 41 minutes 31 secondsS9E7 - Sajag-Nepal (Part 3)
Sajag-Nepal's "Notes from the Field" is a three-episode podcast for "Disasters: Deconstructed" This special episode will introduce listeners to the work and scope of the "Sajag-Nepal: Planning and Preparedness for the Mountain Hazard and Risk Chain in Nepal" project. Most importantly it will explore Sajag-Nepal project’s approaches to interdisciplinary and intercultural research on multi-hazards and risk chains in Nepal.
In our final episode (of 3) we will focus on Slope Monitoring Equipment, which aims to study slope movement. Additionally, we will engage in discussions with community members from Bhotekoshi to better understand their perspectives on slope movement. The goal of this episode is to facilitate a dialogue between scientific knowledge and community insights regarding slope movement.
We hope you enjoy the discussion!
Follow us on Twitter, Instagram and Facebook @DisastersDecon
Rate and Review on Apple Podcasts
Subscribe wherever you get your podcasts!
Hosts: Nyima Dorjee Bhotia, Dipak Basnet, Anuradha Puri & Tek Bahadur Dong
Speakers: Dr. Megh Raj Dhital, Dr. Nick Rosser, Dr. Mukta Lama, Ramesh Shrestha (PhD student at Geography Department, Durham University, UK) the participants from Marming workshop, Bhotekoshi, Sindhupalchowk
Translation of the Nepal folk song
The landslide occurs every year.
What is the government doing?
We are worried- where to go,
What to eat, what to wear.
Landslides bring sorrow.
While the government watches,
landslides have increased.
We are worried- where to go,
What to eat, what to wear.
Acknowledgement
We would like to thank the people of Marmin in Bhote Kosi Rural Municipality who kindly participated in our workshop and who gave their time to be interviewed for our project and the podcast. Thank you for sharing your experiences with us.
We also acknowledge our colleagues at Social Science Baha for their time to give a voice over in the Nepali interview recording
Prasansa Thapa
Sujit Maharjan
Rajib Neupane
Sanjit Shrestha
Sachin Karki
Sakar Sapkota
Further Info:
Sajag-Nepal: Twitter, project website
Social Science Baha: Website, Twitter
Sajag-Nepal project film produced by BBC Media Action (Film on Phagam)
22 July 2024, 1:11 pm - 54 minutes 22 secondsS9E6 - Sajag-Nepal (Part 2)
Sajag-Nepal's "Notes from the Field" is a three-episode podcast for "Disasters: Deconstructed" This special episode will introduce listeners to the work and scope of the "Sajag-Nepal: Planning and Preparedness for the Mountain Hazard and Risk Chain in Nepal" project. Most importantly it will explore Sajag-Nepal project’s approaches to interdisciplinary and intercultural research on multi-hazards and risk chains in Nepal.
Welcome to Episode 2 (of 3), where we will explore the understanding of multi-hazards from the perspectives of both the local community and scientists. To do this, we will take the episode to Temal and engage in conversations with local community members to gain insights into their understanding of hazards/multi-hazards. Additionally, we will interview anthropologist Mukta Tamang, geographer Gopi Basyal and geologist Megh Dhital on the topic.
We hope you enjoy the discussion!
Follow us on Twitter, Instagram and Facebook @DisastersDecon
Rate and Review on Apple Podcasts
Subscribe wherever you get your podcasts!
Hosts:Tek Bahadur Dong, Anuradha Puri, Nyima Dorjee Bhotia, Dipak Basnet,
Speakers: Prof. Megh Raj Dhital, Dr. Gopi Krishna Basyal, and Dr. Mukta Singh Lama
Further Info:
Sajag-Nepal: Twitter, project website
Social Science Baha: Website, Twitter
Sajag-Nepal project film produced by BBC Media Action (Film on Phagam)
NSET: Website
19 June 2024, 2:13 am - 32 minutes 34 secondsS9E5 - Sajag-Nepal (Part 1)
Sajag-Nepal's "Notes from the Field" is a three-episode podcast for "Disasters: Deconstructed" This special episode will introduce listeners to the work and scope of the "Sajag-Nepal: Planning and Preparedness for the Mountain Hazard and Risk Chain in Nepal" project. Most importantly it will explore Sajag-Nepal project’s approaches to interdisciplinary and intercultural research on multi-hazards and risk chains in Nepal.
In the first episode, we discuss cascading hazards in Nepal, with a focus on earthquakes and monsoon-triggered hazards like landslides. This episode will center around the project’s approaches to interdisciplinary and intercultural research.
We hope you enjoy the discussion!
Follow us on Twitter, Instagram and Facebook @DisastersDecon
Rate and Review on Apple Podcasts
Subscribe wherever you get your podcasts!
Hosts: Nyima Dorjee Bhotia, Dipak Basnet, Anuradha Puri & Tek Bahadur Dong
Speakers: Dr. Katie Oven, Dr. Amy Johnson, and Dr. Jeevan Baniya
Further Info:
Sajag-Nepal: Twitter, project website
Social Science Baha: Website, Twitter
Sajag-Nepal project film produced by BBC Media Action (Film on Phagam)
23 April 2024, 2:30 pm - More Episodes? Get the App