The objective of this project is to collect perishable seismic response data from the baseisolated Christchurch Women's Hospital. The strong and continuing sequence of aftershocks presents a unique opportunity to capture high-fidelity data from a modern base-isolated facility. These measurements will provide quantitative information required to assess the mechanisms at play in this and in many other seismically-isolated structures.
War and natural disasters share many features including great loss of life, traumatised populations and haunting memories. The Christchurch earthquakes were the third most costly event of 2011 with total costs of up to $NZ30 billion. Many homes, communities, families and an established way of life have gone for ever. The paper comes from the Women’s Voices project that documents women’s narratives of earthquake trauma and loss and examines their profiles of emotional expression associated with coping. For these women in Christchurch, solace is not about talking experiences of suffering but by doing practical things that inform and are shaped by existing personal narratives. As they relayed this common arc, they also entered into national (and gendered) narrative themes of being practical, stoic, independent and resourceful in the face of tragedy and loss and so embody communal aspects of coping with loss and grief particular to the New Zealand even ‘the South Island settler’ identity narrative. These narratives suggest it useful to rethink key concepts that inform our understanding of coping with disaster and loss.
"The Stories that we tell shape us to be who we are", a report by Elizabeth Ashby produced as part of her Summer Research Scholarship on the Women's Unheard Voices project.
The Evaluating Maternity Units (EMU) study is a mixed method project involving a prospective cohort study, surveys (two postnatal questionnaires) and focus groups. It is an Australasian project funded by the Australian Health and Medical Research Council. Its primary aim was to compare the birth outcomes of two groups of well women – one group who planned to give birth at a primary maternity unit, and a second group who planned to give birth at a tertiary hospital. The secondary aim was to learn about women’s views and experiences regarding their birthplace decision-making, transfer, maternity care and experiences, and any other issues they raised. The New Zealand arm of the study was carried out in Christchurch, and was seriously affected by the earthquakes, halting recruitment at 702 participants. Comprehensive details were collected from both midwives and women regarding antenatal and early labour changes of birthplace plans and perinatal transfers from the primary units to the tertiary hospital. Women were asked about how they felt about plan changes and transfers in the first survey, and they were discussed in some focus groups. The transfer findings are still being analysed and will be presented. This study is set within the local maternity context, is recent, relevant and robust. It provides midwives with contemporary information about transfers from New Zealand primary maternity units and women’s views and experiences. It may help inform the conversations midwives have with each other, and with women and their families/whānau, regarding the choices of birthplace for well childbearing women.
The Canterbury earthquakes and the rebuild are generation-defining events for twenty-first century Aotearoa/ New Zealand. This article uses an actor network approach to explore 32 women’s narratives of being shaken into dangerous disaster situations and reconstituting themselves to cope in socially innovative ways. The women’s stories articulate on-going collective narratives of experiencing disaster and coping with loss in ‘resilient’ ways. In these women’s experiences, coping in disasters is not achieved by talking through the emotional trauma. Instead, coping comes from seeking solace through engagement with one’s own and others’ personal risk and resourcefulness in ways that feed into the emergence of socially innovative voluntary organisations. These stories offer conceptual insight into the multivalent interconnections between resilience and vulnerabilities and the contested nature of post-disaster recovery in Aotearoa/New Zealand. These women gave voice to living through disasters resiliently in ways that forged new networks of support across collective and personal narratives and broader social goals and aspirations for Aotearoa/New Zealand’s future.
Two women painting the base of a mural onto a wall in Sydenham.
Two women painting the base of a mural onto a wall in Sydenham.
Two women painting a mural onto the wall of a building in Sydenham.
The ideal Victorian woman In Victorian society, a woman was to be meek, mild, virtuous and peaceful (Whiteside 2007). She was expected to marry and have children. She would stay at home, looking after her children and her husband and … Continue reading →
An infographic comparing distances and travel times to birthing units from Christchurch Women's Hospital.
Profile of Rosemary Baird; oral history interviewer for the "Women's Voices" oral history project.
Profile of Amanda England; oral history interviewer for the "Women's Voices" oral history project.
Profile of Myra Kunowski; oral history interviewer for the "Women's Voices" oral history project.
Profile of Sara Epperson; oral history interviewer for the "Women's Voices" oral history project.
Profile of Raewyn Dawson; oral history interviewer for the "Women's Voices" oral history project.
Profile of Helen Gibson; oral history interviewer for the "Women's Voices" oral history project.
Profile of Judith Mackenzie ; oral history interviewer for the "Women's Voices" oral history project.
Profile of Liz Gordon; oral history interviewer for the "Women's Voices" oral history project.
Profile of Elizabeth Ashby; oral history interviewer for the "Women's Voices" oral history project.
Profile of Judith Sutherland; oral history interviewer for the "Women's Voices" oral history project.
Profile of Beverley Price; oral history interviewer for the "Women's Voices" oral history project.
Profile of Diane Candy; oral history interviewer for the "Women's Voices" oral history project.
Profile of Roberta Hill; oral history interviewer for the "Women's Voices" oral history project.
Profile of Melissa Parsons; oral history interviewer for the "Women's Voices" oral history project.
Profile of Cassandra Mudgway ; oral history interviewer for the "Women's Voices" oral history project.
Profile of Helene Mautner ; oral history interviewer for the "Women's Voices" oral history project.
Profile of Brigid Buckenham; oral history interviewer for the "Women's Voices" oral history project.
Profile of Mary Smyth; oral history interviewer for the "Women's Voices" oral history project.
Profile of Deborah Williams; oral history interviewer for the "Women's Voices" oral history project.
Profile of Chris Wilson; oral history interviewer for the "Women's Voices" oral history project.