All Right? Newsletter: All Right? November update
Articles, UC QuakeStudies
A PDF copy of a newsletter sent by All Right? to their mailing list in November 2014.
A PDF copy of a newsletter sent by All Right? to their mailing list in November 2014.
A PDF copy of a newsletter sent by All Right? to their mailing list in February 2014.
A PDF copy of a newsletter sent by All Right? to their mailing list in May 2014.
A PDF copy of a newsletter sent by All Right? to their mailing list in September 2014.
A PDF copy of a newsletter sent by All Right? to their mailing list in June 2014.
A PDF copy of a newsletter sent by All Right? to their mailing list in December 2014.
A photograph of people (including three 'All Righties') posing with large coloured signs. The signs have various compliments on them, directed at the people of Canterbury. All Right? posted the photograph on their Facebook page on 17 December 2013 at 10:25am.
A PDF document containing images of a selection of All Right?'s campaigns and projects. Each document contains different images taken from a selected campaign.
A poster produced by All Right? titled, Starting a community conversation about wellbeing in post-earthquake Christchurch. The poster outlines the three different phases of All Right, and how it is making a difference to people in Canterbury.
The disastrous earthquakes that struck Christchurch in 2010 and 2011 seriously impacted on the individual and collective lives of Māori residents. This paper continues earlier, predominantly qualitative research on the immediate effects on Māori by presenting an analysis of a survey carried out 18 months after the most destructive event, on 22 February 2011. Using a set-theoretic approach, pathways to Māori resilience are identified, emphasising the combination of whānau connectivity and high incomes in those who have maintained or increased their wellbeing post-disaster. However, the results show that if resilience is used to describe a “bounce back” in wellbeing, Māori are primarily enduring the post-disaster environment. This endurance phase is a precursor to any resilience and will be of much longer duration than first thought. With continued uncertainty in the city and wider New Zealand economy, this endurance may not necessarily lead to a more secure environment for Māori in the city.