Amber Henderson's Story
Articles, UC QuakeStudies
Summary of oral history interview with Amber Henderson about her experiences of the Canterbury earthquakes.
Summary of oral history interview with Amber Henderson about her experiences of the Canterbury earthquakes.
Transcript of Robyn Anderson's earthquake story, captured by the UC QuakeBox project.
Summary of oral history interview with Susan Allen about her experiences of the Canterbury earthquakes.
Transcript of Garth's earthquake story, captured by the UC QuakeBox project.
Transcript of Micah Swindells's earthquake story, captured by the UC QuakeBox project.
Transcript of Pat Twiss's earthquake story, captured by the UC QuakeBox project.
Transcript of Jason Tutauha's earthquake story, captured by the UC QuakeBox project.
Summary of oral history interview with Phillippa Jacobs about her experiences of the Canterbury earthquakes.
A story submitted by Jennifer to the QuakeStories website.
Transcript of Liz Grant's earthquake story, captured by the UC QuakeBox project.
Transcript of participant number UC208YW's earthquake story, captured by the UC QuakeBox project.
Transcript of Gail Davey's earthquake story, captured by the UC QuakeBox project.
Summary of oral history interview with Jacqui Gavin about her experiences of the Canterbury earthquakes.
Transcript of Robin Robins's earthquake story, captured by the UC QuakeBox project.
Transcript of Participant number LY677's earthquake story, captured by the UC QuakeBox project.
The "Lyttelton Review" newsletter for 26 November 2012, produced by the Lyttelton Harbour Information Centre.
A story submitted by Mike Williams to the QuakeStories website.
A paper which details earthquake expectation data, supplied to SCIRT by GNS Science.
An entry from Deb Robertson's blog for 4 September 2013 entitled, "We've been living our new life post earthquake for three years now....".
A copy of the CanCERN online newsletter published on 21 June 2013
A pdf transcript of Kate Lambert's second earthquake story, captured by the UC QuakeBox Take 2 project. Interviewer: Samuel Hope. Transcriber: Lauren Millar.
A story submitted by Mark Darbyshire to the QuakeStories website.
Transcript of Leita Tonkin's earthquake story, captured by the UC QuakeBox project.
An entry from Jennifer Middendorf's blog for 7 December 2013 entitled, "Moving, baking, and other chaos".
Transcript of Rob Seddon-Smith's earthquake story, captured by the UC QuakeBox project.
An entry from Deb Robertson's blog for 3 September 2012 entitled, "There's a lot you can learn in two years....".
A news item titled, "Canterbury University Earthquake Lectures", published on the Lyttelton Harbour Information Centre's website on Friday, 23 September 2011.
The "Lyttelton Review" newsletter for 16 January 2012, produced by the Lyttelton Harbour Information Centre.
Transcript of R C Norman's earthquake story, captured by the UC QuakeBox project.
Natural hazard reviews reveal increases in disaster impacts nowhere more pronounced than in coastal settlements. Despite efforts to enhance hazard resilience, the common trend remains to keep producing disaster prone places. This paper explicitly explores hazard versus multi-hazard concepts to illustrate how different conceptualizations can enhance or reduce settlement resilience. Understandings gained were combined with onthe-ground lessons from earthquake and flooding experiences to develop of a novel ‘first cut’ approach for analyzing key multi-hazard interconnections, and to evaluate resilience enhancing opportunities. Traditional disaster resilience efforts often consider different hazard types discretely. However, recent events in Christchurch, a New Zealand city that is part of the 100 Resilient Cities network, highlight the need to analyze the interrelated nature of different hazards, especially for enhancing lifelines system resilience. Our overview of the Christchurch case study demonstrates that seismic, hydrological, shallow-earth, and coastal hazards can be fundamentally interconnected, with catastrophic results where such interconnections go unrecognized. In response, we have begun to develop a simple approach for use by different stakeholders to support resilience planning, pre and post disaster, by: drawing attention to natural and built environment multi-hazard links in general; illustrating a ‘first cut’ tool for uncovering earthquake-flooding multi-hazard links in particular; and providing a basis for reviewing resilience strategy effectiveness in multi-hazard prone environments. This framework has particular application to tectonically active areas exposed to climate-change issues.