Canta Magazine Volume 82 Issue 2 from 30 March 2011.
Canta Magazine Volume 82 Issue 4 13 from April 2011.
Canta Magazine Volume 82 Issue 9 from 25 May 2011.
Canta Magazine Volume 82 Issue 23 from 12 October 2011.
Canta Magazine Volume 82 Issue 22 from 5 October 2011.
Canta Magazine Volume 82 Issue 18 from 7 September 2011.
Canta Magazine Volume 82 Issue 15 from 4 August 2011.
Canta Magazine Volume 82 Issue 16 from 10 August 2011.
Canta Magazine Volume 82 Issue 10 from 1 June 2011.
Canta Magazine Volume 82 Issue 13 from 20 July 2011.
Canta Magazine Volume 82 Issue 12 from 13 July 2011.
Canta Magazine Volume 82 Issue 17 from 17 August 2011.
Canta Magazine Volume 82 Issue 21 from 28 September 2011.
Canta Magazine Volume 82 Issue 19 from 14 September 2011.
Canta Magazine Volume 82 Issue 20 from 21 September 2011.
Canta Magazine Volume 82 Issue 14 from 28 July 2011.
Canta Magazine Volume 82 Issue 6 from 4 May 2011.
Canta Magazine Volume 82 Issue 0 from 14 March 2011.
Canta Magazine Volume 82 Issue 1 from 23 March 2011.
Canta Magazine Volume 82 Issue 11 from 13 June 2011.
Canta Magazine Volume 82 Issue 5 20 from April 2011.
Students sit outside the InTentCity 6.3 Cafe, which was set up in a tent in the Law car park while University of Canterbury buildings were closed for structural testing. The photographer comments, "The University restarts its teaching, and the techies in e-learning move out of NZi3. The cafe has an outside seating area under the trees".
University of Canterbury students outside one of the tents used while lecture theatres were closed for structural testing. The photographer comments, "Students leave a lecture tent".
There is a critical strand of literature suggesting that there are no ‘natural’ disasters (Abramovitz, 2001; Anderson and Woodrow, 1998; Clarke, 2008; Hinchliffe, 2004). There are only those that leave us – the people - more or less shaken and disturbed. There may be some substance to this; for example, how many readers recall the 7.8 magnitude earthquake centred in Fiordland in July 2009? Because it was so far away from a major centre and very few people suffered any consequences, the number is likely to be far fewer than those who remember (all too vividly) the relatively smaller 7.1 magnitude Canterbury quake of September 4th 2010 and the more recent 6.3 magnitude February 22nd 2011 event. One implication of this construction of disasters is that seismic events, like those in Canterbury, are as much socio-political as they are geological. Yet, as this paper shows, the temptation in recovery is to tick boxes and rebuild rather than recover, and to focus on hard infrastructure rather than civic expertise and community involvement. In this paper I draw upon different models of community engagement and use Putnam’s (1995) notion of ‘social capital’ to frame the argument that ‘building bridges’ after a disaster is a complex blend of engineering, communication and collaboration. I then present the results of a qualitative research project undertaken after the September 4th earthquake. This research helps to illustrate the important connections between technical rebuilding, social capital, recovery processes and overall urban resilience.
Students from the University of Canterbury lining up for a barbeque lunch. The students have volunteered to dig up liquefaction as part of the Student Volunteer Army.
Students from the University of Canterbury lining up for a barbeque lunch. The students have volunteered to dig up liquefaction as part of the Student Volunteer Army.
Students from the University of Canterbury lining up for a barbeque lunch. The students have volunteered to dig up liquefaction as part of the Student Volunteer Army.
Students from the University of Canterbury lining up for a barbeque lunch. The students have volunteered to dig up liquefaction as part of the Student Volunteer Army.
Students from the University of Canterbury lining up for a barbeque lunch. The students have volunteered to dig up liquefaction as part of the Student Volunteer Army.
University of Canterbury staff members prepare to be escorted to their buildings by Civil Defence members in order to retrieve essential items from their offices.