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Nature-society relations in disaster governance frameworks
Örebro University, School of Humanities, Education and Social Sciences. Institute for Risk and Disaster Reduction, University College London, United Kingdom; Hanken School of Economics, Finland.ORCID iD: 0000-0001-7813-9588
2025 (English)In: Disasters. The Journal of Disaster Studies, Policy and Management, ISSN 0361-3666, E-ISSN 1467-7717, Vol. 49, no 2, article id e12678Article in journal (Refereed) Published
Abstract [en]

This paper studies how the relations between nature and society are constructed in disaster governance frameworks. Dominant disaster governance frameworks present nature and society as separate realms, and the organisation of society is increasingly seen as the key cause of hazards and disasters. Disaster impacts are similarly framed around adverse societal consequences, while other-than-human nature is merely the background across which disasters unfold, as property lost, or a means of disaster governance. Although the centrality of human impacts is troubled when biodiversity or a disaster flagship species is threatened, neither situation challenges the nature-society dualism embedded in dominant disaster governance frameworks. The attention and resources of disaster governance target the societal side of nature-society dualism. This study finds, though, that in peripheries characterised by remoteness from centres of power, a sparse human population, and large spaces of other-than-human nature, the vulnerabilities facing humans and other-than-human nature risk being ungoverned.

Place, publisher, year, edition, pages
Wiley-Blackwell Publishing Inc., 2025. Vol. 49, no 2, article id e12678
Keywords [en]
Finland, Nordic, disaster governance, nature, nature–society dualism, other‐than‐human nature, periphery, relations
National Category
Human Geography
Identifiers
URN: urn:nbn:se:oru:diva-119751DOI: 10.1111/disa.12678ISI: 001437891400001PubMedID: 40040316Scopus ID: 2-s2.0-86000097290OAI: oai:DiVA.org:oru-119751DiVA, id: diva2:1942977
Funder
Tore Browaldhs stiftelse, B21-0005
Note

Funding Agencies:

This research was supported by Tore Browaldhs Stiftelse (grant number: B21-0005]), the Belmont Forum through the United Kingdom's Natural Environment Research Council (grant number: NE/ T013656/1), the Hanken Support Foundation, and Liikesivistysrahasto.

Available from: 2025-03-07 Created: 2025-03-07 Last updated: 2026-01-23Bibliographically approved

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Meriläinen, Eija

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