Surprise ecologies: case studies on temporal vulnerability in four North American floodplains

When hazards, such as floods, are collectively experienced as "surprising", this heightens the shock experience and likelihood of disaster, and exacerbates its impact. I outline how such collective surprises can be seen as the outcome of a dynamic condition of vulnerability that revolves a...

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Main Author: Daniel H. de Vries
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Resilience Alliance 2019-12-01
Series:Ecology and Society
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.ecologyandsociety.org/vol24/iss4/art37/
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spelling doaj-c9b0af147f3c49cb91e27b964437a3a32020-11-25T00:46:16ZengResilience AllianceEcology and Society1708-30872019-12-012443710.5751/ES-11274-24043711274Surprise ecologies: case studies on temporal vulnerability in four North American floodplainsDaniel H. de Vries0University of Amsterdam, Department of AnthropologyWhen hazards, such as floods, are collectively experienced as "surprising", this heightens the shock experience and likelihood of disaster, and exacerbates its impact. I outline how such collective surprises can be seen as the outcome of a dynamic condition of vulnerability that revolves around how humans construct expectations about future risks. This "temporal vulnerability" is determined largely by the experience of dynamic processes through time, or temporality. This paper is based on ethnohistorical data collection in four U.S. floodplains (California, Louisiana, North Carolina, Georgia) from 2000 through 2005. It shows how surprise conditions can be studied by focusing on temporal referentiality, or how successfully evaluators bring lived experience and historical data into the present. Results showed that temporal vulnerability increases as a result of the "narrowing" of relatively predictable surprise conditions in three interactive, dynamic systems: human meaning making, landscape change, and stochastic timing of hazard events. Conditions of surprise are classified by lack of temporal references (ignorance), erosion of temporal referencing practices (naivety), and misguided temporal referencing (denial). The concept of temporal resilience is outlined and illustrated.http://www.ecologyandsociety.org/vol24/iss4/art37/expectationsfloodingmemoryreferentialityresiliencesurprisetemporalityvulnerability
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Daniel H. de Vries
spellingShingle Daniel H. de Vries
Surprise ecologies: case studies on temporal vulnerability in four North American floodplains
Ecology and Society
expectations
flooding
memory
referentiality
resilience
surprise
temporality
vulnerability
author_facet Daniel H. de Vries
author_sort Daniel H. de Vries
title Surprise ecologies: case studies on temporal vulnerability in four North American floodplains
title_short Surprise ecologies: case studies on temporal vulnerability in four North American floodplains
title_full Surprise ecologies: case studies on temporal vulnerability in four North American floodplains
title_fullStr Surprise ecologies: case studies on temporal vulnerability in four North American floodplains
title_full_unstemmed Surprise ecologies: case studies on temporal vulnerability in four North American floodplains
title_sort surprise ecologies: case studies on temporal vulnerability in four north american floodplains
publisher Resilience Alliance
series Ecology and Society
issn 1708-3087
publishDate 2019-12-01
description When hazards, such as floods, are collectively experienced as "surprising", this heightens the shock experience and likelihood of disaster, and exacerbates its impact. I outline how such collective surprises can be seen as the outcome of a dynamic condition of vulnerability that revolves around how humans construct expectations about future risks. This "temporal vulnerability" is determined largely by the experience of dynamic processes through time, or temporality. This paper is based on ethnohistorical data collection in four U.S. floodplains (California, Louisiana, North Carolina, Georgia) from 2000 through 2005. It shows how surprise conditions can be studied by focusing on temporal referentiality, or how successfully evaluators bring lived experience and historical data into the present. Results showed that temporal vulnerability increases as a result of the "narrowing" of relatively predictable surprise conditions in three interactive, dynamic systems: human meaning making, landscape change, and stochastic timing of hazard events. Conditions of surprise are classified by lack of temporal references (ignorance), erosion of temporal referencing practices (naivety), and misguided temporal referencing (denial). The concept of temporal resilience is outlined and illustrated.
topic expectations
flooding
memory
referentiality
resilience
surprise
temporality
vulnerability
url http://www.ecologyandsociety.org/vol24/iss4/art37/
work_keys_str_mv AT danielhdevries surpriseecologiescasestudiesontemporalvulnerabilityinfournorthamericanfloodplains
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