A.
1. threat + vulnerability
2. “bouncing back”
3. “disaster in disaster management”
4. anthropogenic disaster
5. hazard mapping
6. dalub-agham
7. “external variability”, “internal complexity”
8. compound extreme events
9. tipping points
10. science and government
a. heat waves and droughts
b. human-induced disaster
c. “double disaster”
d. risk
e. rehabilitation
f. my first area of research involvement
g. scientist
h. Oliver-Smith (anthropology of disaster)
i. beyond the critical threshold
j. critical in engendering sound policy response
B.
1. prudence
2. “every nation for itself”
3. most naturally indebted
4. green new deals
5. adaptation
6. mitigation
7. resilience
8. resistance
9. discourse of suspicion
10. polluter pays principle
a. a false solution
b. tumbalik
c. anti-thesis of global solidarity
d. policy privilege of the Global North
e. Global North
f. thoughtful decision-making
g. process of adjustment to the impact of climate change
h. measures to reduce and curb the GHG emission
i. going beyond resilience
j. useful in problematizing false solutions
C.
1. atmospheric space
2. dialectics
3. hidden victims
4. care for the __!
5. 72-hour kit
6. heroism
7. merchants of death
8. __ war budget to basic social services
9. peace activist
10. crisis of over-extension
a. imperialist wars, expansion of sphere of influence, global network of
US military installation
b. RGS
c. weapons manufacturer
d. collective grief, collective hope
e. equitable sharing of technology, resources, and ___
f. disaster preparedness
g. sacrifice for a greater cause
h. care workers
i. health workers, first responders, disaster reporters
j. rechannel
D.
1. bounce back better…
2. care
3. top-down + bottom-up approaches
4. mitigation, preparedness, response, ___
5. Kamera at Kalamidad
6. Beyond Resilience
7. Disaster Financing
8. kapit-bisig
9. slow violence
10. disaster capitalism
a. Naomi Klein
b. Bibingka strategy (Borras, 1998)
c. call, cry, sorrow, lamentation, concern, anxiety
d. safer and faster
e. rehabilitation/restoration/reintegration
f. J. Rodriguez
g. J. Naco
h. S. Betito
i. Citizens’ Disaster Response Center
j. “graduate and invisible”
E.
1. slow onset
2. chronic poisoning
3. disaster in disaster management
4. agroecological praxis
5. Dr. CPD Gudran
6. sudden onset
7. disaster data collection system in complex emergencies
8. acute poisoning
9. Dr. SNM Dalisay
10. animal rescue in Taal
a. disaster medicine
b. desertification
c. earthquake
d. toxicity that appears within hours or days
e. my seminar paper in MPM
f. DRRM as reactive and tokenistic
g. toxicity that takes a long time to manifest
h. MASIPAG
i. anthropology of disaster
j. PAWS, PETA