Action- and Equity-Oriented Approaches to Disaster Research

Thursday, July 13, 10:15 to 11:45 a.m. MDT
Location: Centennial F

Moderator

Analysis of Lifestyle Recovery for Data-Driven Insights of Disaster Impacts

Natalie Coleman, Texas A&M University
Ali Mostafavi, Texas A&M University

Modeling the Interaction Between Human Performance and Cascading Hazards

Pegah Farshadmanesh, University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign

Agriculture Flood Loss and Social Vulnerability in the United States

Md. Asif Rahman, University of Iowa
Eric Tate, University of Iowa

Comparing Geographic Information System-Based Flood Resilience Models in a Developing Nation

Ahmad Mojtoba Riyadh, University of Utah
Tom Cova, University of Utah
Tim Collins, University of Utah
Richard Medina, University of Utah

Science-Practice Partnerships for Using Hurricane Forecasts To Enhance Florida’s Critical Infrastructure Resilience

Yue Ge, University of Central Florida
Theresia Phoa, University of Central Florida
Rebecca Morss, National Center for Atmospheric Research

Closing the Gap Between Knowledge and Action: The Gamble of Seismic Risk

Louise Comfort, University of California, Berkeley
Suleyman Celik, Anadolu University
Burcak Erkan, Middle East Technical University

Sensitive Data Handling Lessons From Engagement With Rhode Island’s Critical Infrastructure Sector

Austin Becker, University of Rhode Island
Isaac Ginis, University of Rhode Island
Pam Rubinoff, University of Rhode Island
Kyle McElroy, University of Rhode Island
Peter Stempel, Penn State University
Noah Hallisey, University of Rhode Island
Chris Damon, University of Rhode Island

Ethical Implications of Participatory Action Research in Community-Based Response to Climate Change

Haleh Mehdipour, University of Florida
Jason von Meding, University of Florida
Marjorie Prokosch, Rochester Institute of Technology

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