DRC 60th Anniversary Featured Presentations

Featured Presentations to Spark
Thinking on Imagined Futures

DRC 60th Anniversary Featured Presentations

In honor of the 60th anniversary of the Disaster Research Center, we invited scholars, poets, and practitioners to set the stage on the first morning of the workshop. These speakers sparked our conversations about not only solving the problems of today, but addressing the disasters on the immediate horizon and of the future that lurks in the distance. 

Jennifer Lazo

Jennifer Lazo of the City of Los Angeles Emergency Management Department gives this featured presentation describing the novel circumstances facing emergency managers and how they are planning to contend with them. From a growth in supporting asylum seekers, to persistent wildfire threats, to emerging technologies such as machine-to-machine actions: Watch to learn how researchers can help “now we are everything” emergency managers better deal with future threats.

Jenniffer M. Santos-Hernández of the University of Puerto Rico-Río Piedras gives this featured presentation where she shares observations on her practice as a field disaster researcher in Puerto Rico. Her presentation highlights the need for convergence science, particularly the importance of the social sciences, to enhance community engagement around disaster reduction.

Giuseppe Lelow of Italy’s Università Politecnica delle Marche and visiting scholar at the Disaster Research Center of the University of Delaware, presents on the relationship between emergency management and Information technology. Using the metaphor of Leonardo Da Vinci’s Mona Lisa, he explores the challenges and potentials of crowd-sourced data. 

Mitch Stripling

Mitch Stripling of Columbia University discusses the relationship between disasters and social change. Emergency managers may want to avoid it, but the actions we take can’t help triggering social change in one form or another. Watch and learn how the future of disaster planning must consider this impact, and how managing toward a hopeful future instead of recovering an imagined past can make any social change that occurs more egalitarian.

A.R. Siders

A.R. Siders – a “climate geek” at the University of Delaware – talks about the need for creativity and play to advance the kind of innovative thinking and ambitious adaptation demanded by climate change. Watch to see what Star Trek, haikus, climate fiction, and video games have to teach us about adapting and choosing our new future.