Plenary: Interdisciplinary Collaboration, Equity, and Community Engagement
Wednesday, July 12, 2:30 to 4:00 p.m. MDT
Location: Centennial Ballroom
Mounting disaster losses underscore the need for deeper interdisciplinary collaboration, community engagement, and rigorous research focused on understanding and reducing risks and vulnerability. This opening plenary session features recent research concerned with co-producing knowledge with people living at risk while also addressing pressing and long-term community needs. Presenters will share methodological innovations as well as new findings in the areas of resilience, relocation, and beyond in the context of multiple hazards.
Moderators

Chair, Researchers Meeting Organizing Committee

Co-Chair, Researchers Meeting Organizing Committee
Learning From Community Approaches Towards Building Resilience to Risks in Puerto Rico
Santina Contreras, University of Southern California
Monique Lorenzo Pérez, Estudios Técnicos
Mismatched Perspectives on Flood Management Among Stakeholders: Implications for Achieving Community Resilience
Sinta Sulistyo, Arizona State University
Datu Buyung Agusdinata, Arizona State University
Katja Brundiers, Arizona State University
Rimjhim Aggarwal, Arizona State University
Rural Resilience Assessments and Strategies—A Case Study in Kamiah, Idaho
Brittany Brand, Boise State University
Carson MacPherson-Krutsky, Boise State University
Collaborating to Mitigate Compounding Trauma in Disaster: Evacuations and Displacement in Indigenous Communities
Lilia Yumagulova, University of Saskatchewan
Rosalita Whitehair, Diné Nation
Simon Lambert, University of Saskatchewan
Darlene Munro, Siksika Nation
Adapting and Applying the Chains of Consequences Method to Post-Fire Hazard Consequences
Briar Goldwyn, U.S. Geological Survey
James Meldrum, U.S. Geological Survey
Rudy Schuster, U.S. Geological Survey