Vision
Aotearoa New Zealand adapts and thrives in the face of multiple natural hazard risks.
Programme description
Aotearoa New Zealand faces increasingly complex risks from natural hazard events. This complexity is not only about the hazards themselves, but also the instititutional, professional, economic and political risks associated with their management.
Preparing for, responding to, and recovering from disasters requires new tools and knowledge to learn from past experience and plan for the future, and to support the diverse communities of Aotearoa New Zealand in adapting and thriving in the face of shocks and disruption.
The Resilience, Policy & Governance programme brought together leading researchers, stakeholders partners in central and local government, universities, iwi and hapū and community groups. We aim to advance the social scientific understanding of resilience in Aotearoa New Zealand, identify solutions, and deliver outcomes for resilience.
Our research is organised around three interrelated projects, to deliver new tools to analyse the impacts of past events and help decision-makers plan for the future. Our case studies focus on complex problems such as managed retreat that defy easy or all-encompassing solutions, and vulnerable people and places where risk exposure or consequences are high and there is limited local coping capacity.
Our goal is for decision-makers to have the information to:
Wawata
Ka urutau, ka puāwai a Aotearoa ahakoa ngā tūraru mōrearea maha o te ao tūroa.
Whakaahuatanga papatono
Kei te piki haere ngā tūraru matatini o Aotearoa i ngā mōrearea o te ao tūroa. Ehara mō ngā mōreareatanga anake tēnei matatinitanga engari ko ngā tūraru ā-whakahaere, -ā-ngaio, -ā-ōhanga, ā-torangapū hoki e pā ana ki te whakahaere mōrearea.
Mā te whai i ngā taputapu me ngā mātauranga hou ki te whakarite, ki te urupare me te whakaora mai i ngā aituā e whai mōhiotanga i ngā wheako o mua me te whakamahere mō te anamata, me te tautoko i ngā hapori kanorau o Aotearoa ki te urutau me te puāwai ahakoa ngā ohoreretanga me ngā pōrarurarutanga.
Ka whakakotahitia te kaupapa Te Manawaroa, Ngā Kaupapahere me te Mana Urungi i ngā kairangahau matua, te hunga whaipānga, ngā hoa mahi o te kāwanatanga ā-motu, ā-rohe hoki, ngā whare wānanga, ngā iwi, hapū, me ngā rōpū hapori. Kei te whai mātou ki te kōkiri i ngā māramatanga tikanga ā-iwi o te manawaroa i roto i a Aotearoa, te tautohu i ngā rongoā, me te whakahaere i ngā putanga mō te manawaroa.
E whakahaerehia ana ā mātou rangahau i runga i ngā kaupapa hono e toru, ā, ka whakaputa i ētahi rauemi hou hei tātari i ngā pāpātanga o ngā takunetanga o mua me te āwhina i ngā kaiwhakatau ki te whakamahere mō te anamata.
Kei te aro ā mātou rangahau take ki ngā raruraru matatini pērā i te whakahaere whakatahi, e whakatōrea ana i ngā rongoā māmā, whānui rānei, ā, ki ngā tāngata whakaraerae me ngā wāhi nui te pānga ki te tūraru, nui ngā pāpātanga rānei, ka mutu he iti noa te āheinga ā-rohe ki te whakahaere tūraru.
Ko tō mātou whāinga kia whai mōhiohio ngā kaiwhakatau ki te:
Research Team
As natural disasters become more frequent, the role of women in recovery needs to be recognised and adequately supported.
Presentation slides from our live Expert Q&A continuing the conversations from our Te Tai Whanake symposium.
Continuing the conversations from our Te Tai Whanake symposium, some of our panelists answered your questions live.
Housing issues that are likely to arise immediately following a disaster.
S. Lembke, L. Cartier, J. Fountain, N. Cradock-Henry, L-P. Dana 2024 A model for understanding industry cluster development among New World wineries International Journal of…
E.E.H. Doyle, J. Thompson, S.R. Hill, M. Williams, D. Paton, S.E. Harrison, A. Bostrom, J.S. Becker 2024 Differences in perceived sources of uncertainty in natural…