All Stories

  1. The paradox of social capital: A case of immigrants, refugees and linguistic minorities in the Canterbury and Tohoku disasters
  2. Collaborative autoethnography: “self-reflection” as a timely alternative research approach during the global pandemic
  3. Exploring Disasters through the Eyes of Residential Nursing Home Caregivers
  4. Methodological Challenges in Social Vulnerability and Resilience Research: Reflections on Studies in the Canterbury and Tohoku Disasters*
  5. Disaster linguicism: Linguistic minorities in disasters
  6. Surfing with Bourdieu! A Qualitative Analysis of the Fluid Power Relations among Surfers in the Line-Ups
  7. Strategic invisibilization, hypervisibility and empowerment among marriage-migrant women in rural Japan
  8. Book review: Dexter Zavalza Hough-Snee and Alexander Sotelo Eastman (Eds.), The Critical Surf Studies ReaderHough-SneeDexter ZavalzaEastmanAlexander Sotelo (Eds.), The Critical Surf Studies Reader. Durham, NC and London: Duke University Press, 2017. IS...
  9. Social Vulnerability in Disasters: Immigrant and Refugee Experiences in Canterbury and Tohoku
  10. Vulnerable and resilient? Immigrants and refugees in the 2010–2011 Canterbury and Tohoku disasters
  11. Rethinking resilience: Bourdieu’s contribution to disaster research