Science in a crisis: networks, hierarchies and colonial continuities in responses to volcanic crises
26.11.2024 17:30 – 19:00
This talk will present findings from the interdisciplinary Curating Crises project, which examined the hidden histories of volcano science in the English-speaking Caribbean over the course of the twentieth century. Episodes of volcanic unrest are unique moments in which different forms of knowledge – scientific, experiential, ‘local’ – are brought into the high-stakes environment of crisis management and decision-making. This talk will explore the colonial dynamics of these processes, focusing on volcanic crises in Montserrat in the 1930s and 1990s. It will explore the knowledge networks and hierarchies that shaped governmental responses, and argue that some of the deficiencies in the early response to the 1990s crisis can be explained by events in the 1930s. The case will therefore be made for a long-term perspective on hazard response, and for interdisciplinary approaches to unearthing historical lessons for the present.
Lieu
Bâtiment: Bâtiment 66 bd Carl-Vogt
CV1
Organisé par
Département de géographie et environnementIntervenant-e-s
Martin Mahony, University of East Angliaentrée libre
Fichiers joints
A3_ScienceInCrisis_26112024.pdf | 585.9 Kb |