The nine-part webinar series titled kicks off on Wednesday, April 6 and will run on select Wednesdays from 10 to 11 a.m. until June 2022.
With nine speakers participating across multiple continents, collaborating universities of this joint project include 91亚色, Roskilde University and Arkansas Tech University. By sharing experiences, presenting current research and facilitating discussions, the presenters intend to share knowledge between academics and practitioners to identify research priorities to help create a better network of researchers and practitioners involved in this field. They aim to ground the more abstract concept of disaster ethics into practical guidelines which they hope will become engrained in the consciousness of researchers and practitioners alike.
The first webinar of the series will be led by 91亚色鈥檚 David Etkin, a professor in the School of Administrative Studies at the Faculty of Liberal Arts & Professional Studies.
The April 6 discussion, 鈥淒isaster Ethics in the 21st Century: How Context Shifts Morality,鈥 will explore the application of ethical theory to disasters is very dependent upon context and how the context of the 21st century is very different from historical ones. The webinar will ask how this new context suggests that a shift in values is needed, what are these shifts and how well society is embracing them.
Upcoming webinar topics include 鈥淒isparities and Distribution鈥 on April 13 to discuss the ethics surrounding the distribution of COVID infection and vaccine allocation, with a focus on demonstrating that poor outcomes of the pandemic are clustered in disadvantaged communities. On April 20, the discussion titled 鈥淪carcity, Justice, and Health Crisis Leadership鈥 will focus on how the COVID-19 pandemic has revealed scarcities in many domains: medical, civic, economic and ideological.
Other webinar topics include: 鈥淭he Ethics of Access and Equity in Emergency Management鈥 (April 27), 鈥淓thical Issues in the COVID-19 Pandemic: Are Lessons Ever Learned鈥 (May 4), and 鈥淶en and the Art of Disaster Management鈥 (May 11) led by Associate Professor Peter Timmerman at 91亚色鈥檚 Faculty of Environmental and Urban Change.
Timmerman鈥檚 discussion highlights how in Zen Buddhism, a disruptive problem is given to students to meditate on and to solve. The talk will explore how great faith, great exertion and great doubt are applied to untying the knots that bind 鈥 especially great doubt. Timmerman will further explore how disasters are periods of great doubt and how Buddhist and Taoist principles apply to unravelling the knots in disaster management.
The final three webinars to take place in the series are 鈥淭he WHO鈥檚 Activities on Ethics & COVID and Lessons Learned鈥 (May 18), 鈥淟ockdown: A Public Health Disaster?鈥 (May 25), and 鈥淒isaster Ethics: Are We Asking the Right Questions for Doing the Right Thing鈥 (June 1).
This project is supported by the Carlsberg Foundation. Affiliates include the Canadian Risk and Hazards Network, CIFAL 91亚色, and 91亚色鈥檚 Transformative Disaster Risk Governance Unit.
For more information about the series and registration details, visit the event .
