Christchurch Press 16 December 2014: Section A, Page 1 (South Island Editi…
Articles, UC QuakeStudies
Page 1 of Section A of the South Island edition of the Christchurch Press, published on Tuesday 16 December 2014.
Page 1 of Section A of the South Island edition of the Christchurch Press, published on Tuesday 16 December 2014.
Page 6 of Section B of the South Island edition of the Christchurch Press, published on Friday 22 August 2014.
Page 3 of Section A of the South Island edition of the Christchurch Press, published on Friday 17 October 2014.
Page 1 of Section A of the South Island edition of the Christchurch Press, published on Tuesday 5 August 2014.
Page 5 of Section A of the South Island edition of the Christchurch Press, published on Tuesday 30 September 2014.
Page 5 of Section B of the South Island edition of the Christchurch Press, published on Monday 6 October 2014.
Page 10 of Section B of the South Island edition of the Christchurch Press, published on Friday 17 October 2014.
Page 10 of Section B of the South Island edition of the Christchurch Press, published on Thursday 9 October 2014.
Page 12 of Section B of the South Island edition of the Christchurch Press, published on Friday 1 August 2014.
The historic home of New Zealand's most popular beer has been secured with a forty-million dollar upgrade. The Prime Minister John Key yesterday officially opened the redeveloped Speight's Brewery in central Dunedin, which has taken over the Lion company's South Island production because of the Christchurch earthquakes.
A new study suggests young Maori wahine are being let down by the health system, because of inadequate information to help them find a midwife; A South Island marae has accepted a donation to repair its wharekai damaged during the 2011 Canterbury earthquakes; About 750 Maori and Pasifika Auckland tertiary students will celebrate their academic achievement.
A new study suggests young Maori wahine are being let down by the health system, because of inadequate information to help them find a midwife; A South Island marae has accepted a donation to repair its wharekai damaged during the 2011 Canterbury earthquakes; About 750 Maori and Pasifika Auckland tertiary students will celebrate their academic achievement this week.
The UC CEISMIC Canterbury Earthquakes Digital Archive was built following the devastating earthquakes that hit the Canterbury region in the South Island of New Zealand from 2010 – 2012. 185 people were killed in the 6.3 magnitude earthquake of February 22nd 2011, thousands of homes and businesses were destroyed, and the local community endured over 10,000 aftershocks. The program aims to document and protect the social, cultural, and intellectual legacy of the Canterbury community for the purposes of memorialization and enabling research. The nationally federated archive currently stores 75,000 items, ranging from audio and video interviews to images and official reports. Tens of thousands more items await ingestion. Significant lessons have been learned about data integration in post-disaster contexts, including but not limited to technical architecture, governance, ingestion process, and human ethics. The archive represents a model for future resilience-oriented data integration and preservation products.
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.