Social Vulnerability in Disasters

Sociology 467-010 – Fall 2005

SYLLABUS TABLE OF CONTENTS

Important note regarding syllabus

General course information and instructor contact information

Course objectives

Required text

Final grade calculation

Proposal

Participation and attendance

Mid-term exam

Video project

Final paper

Class communication and email

Class cancellation policy due to weather

Adjustments to the schedule

Academic integrity

Disabilities

Class schedule

Other important dates

IMPORTANT NOTE

I will be going through the syllabus in great detail on the first day of classes; however, you are responsible for knowing the information provided in this syllabus.

If you do not understand any of the expectations laid out below, please see me immediately and I will be more than happy to clarify. If you added the course after the first day, you must make an appointment to meet with me or the TA and go over the expectations outlined below.

GENERAL COURSE INFORMATION

Professor: Dr. Tricia Wachtendorf

Office Location: Disaster Research Center; Rm. 208, 87 E. Main Street; Newark, DE 19716

The building is near Main & Academy. Use the side door. Faculty offices are upstairs on your left.

Office Phone: 302-831-1254 (DRC office number is 302-831-6618)

Email:

DRC Homepage: www.udel.edu/DRC

Office Hours: Wednesday 9-12 or by appointment

Teaching Assistant: Jenny Froemming

TA Office Hours: TBA

TA Office Phone: 831-4420

TA Email:

TA Office Location: 25 Amstel (directly across from Smith Hall)

Class Meeting Times: Tuesdays and Thursdays 3:30-4:45pm

Class Location: Purnell 229

COURSE OBJECTIVES

This course introduces students to an approach to understanding disasters grounded in social vulnerability analysis. Students will examine social, geographical, and cultural factors that put people differentially at risk before, during, and after disasters. In particular, the course will focus on global, national, regional, and local patterns of development. Students will explore how vulnerable social groups are affected by and cope with hazardous conditions and events, as well as study the capacities of these groups that foster resiliency. This semester’s course pays particular attention to the social impacts and implications of the December 26th, 2004 Indian Ocean tsunami.

REQURIED TEXT

Mapping Vulnerability: Disasters, Development, & People, by Bankoff, Frerks, and Hilhorst

At Risk: Natural Hazards, People’s Vulnerability, and Disasters 2nd edition, by Blaikie, Cannon, Davis, and Wisner

Additional readings will be handed out in class or available at the DRC library as necessary.

FINAL GRADES

A plus/minus grading policy will be followed for your final grade in the course.

Final grades for the course will be based on:

Proposal 10%

Participation 10%

Mid term 20%

Video project 20%

Final paper 40%

PROPOSAL: 10% of grade

An assignment sheet and instructions will be handed out in class on Thursday, September 15. Topics will be picked and assigned in class on Thursday, September 15. Proposals are due in electronic (via email in a word document) AND hard-copy form (in class) on Thursday, September 29 at 3:30pm. You can make arrangements to drop your proposal off earlier, but late proposals will be deducted 1/3 of a letter grade for each 24 hour period that it is late.

PARTICIPATION AND ATTENDANCE: 10% of grade

Remember, attendance and full participation in class discussion are required. You should always come prepared to raise issues and actively discuss the class readings. In this component of the class, your active participation is critical to the success of the course and it will be important in completing your final paper and portion of the video project. Students have a great deal to learn from each other and your contribution to the course through participation and attendance is both essential and valued. This type of class may not be for every student. If you miss classes and/or do not actively and regularly participate, you will not do well in this class. Said another way, poor attendance and not contributing to class discussion will resulting in a failing grade for this portion of your overall assessment. Extra-credit opportunities will not be provided.

MID-TERM: 20% of grade

An in-class mid-term will be administered on Tuesday October 18th. The mid-term will consist of case study problems based on material covered in the first half of the class.

VIDEO PROJECT: 20% of grade

Students will be assigned into project groups. Each group will produce a video segment on social vulnerability and resilience during the Indian Ocean tsunami. The project groups will relate to the student’s final paper topics. This requirement necessitates group collaboration and time spent on using and producing video footage and/or photographs. Additional instructions will be distributed in class.

Clips may be used for educational purposes and only distributed for other’s use the course instructor. If students do not have access to a video camera, the instructor can film students at a pre-arranged time, however, accommodations and structuring of the video must take the instructor’s schedule into account. If the instructor’s camera will be used, a writable mini-DVD must be provided.

Students must submit a signed form by October 4 indicating that their group knows how to edit the footage they will use. A multi-media workstation is available in the basement of Morris Library and a tutorial is available as well. Roxio is the beginner version. Call 831-1475 to reserve the workstation. You may also already have a movie-editing program on your computer, such as Windows Movie Maker.

Editing videos may take longer than you assume, and remember that there is only one workstation at Morris Library. Other students from this class or other classes may be using the workstation for their own assignments. In other words, do not wait until the last minute and assume that you’ll be able to get on the workstation.

Project videos are due Thursday November 17 for Groups 1 & 2 and Tuesday November 29 for Groups 3 & 4. Screenings will take place on December 1 and 6. Part of each student’s grade for this video project will be based on a peer review of group members’ contributions to the project. Students will be asked to asses their peers’ attendance at group working meetings, submission of work as agreed upon, and useful insights or suggestions. Late videos will be deducted 1/3 of a letter grade for each 24 hour period that it is late.

FINAL PAPER: 40% of grade

Each student will write a final paper, including a critical literature review and research on documents/newspaper articles related to their assigned project on the Indian Ocean Tsunami. Instructions will be handed out in class. Papers should be a minimum of 15 pages in length – excluding references – based on 12pt Times New Roman font, double-spaced, and 1 inch margins (or 17 pages with 1.25 left/right margins). Submission of both an electronic and hard copy are required. References must be properly cited using ASA or APA format in the body of the paper and in a reference section at the end of the paper. The final paper is due in class on Tuesday, December 6. Late papers will be deducted 1/3 of a letter grade for each 24 hour period that it is late.

CLASS COMMUNICATION

Students are required to have a University of Delaware email account and to check it regularly as I may need to send notices electronically to the class list between class meeting times. If you use another account, be sure to check your UD account or have emails from the UD address forwarded to your regular email address.

CLASS CANCELATION POLICY

Please see the University of Delaware’s policy on the canceling of classes due to bad weather.

ADJUSTMENTS TO THE SCHEUDLE

I reserve the right to make adjustments to the course schedule as I determine appropriate. Students are still required to have completed all assigned readings and assignments by the dates specified in the syllabus unless I specify otherwise.

ACADEMIC INTEGRETY

I take the issues of academic honesty and dishonesty very seriously.

The University’s rules on academic honesty and dishonesty are described in the official student handbook, available on the web (http://www.udel.edu/judicialaffairs/ai.html) or through the Dean of Students Office. At minimum, if you are found cheating or plagiarizing (or facilitating cheating or plagiarism by another student) you will receive a zero for that assignment. Following University policy, all cases of plagiarism, fabrication, cheating, or other forms of academic misconduct will be reported to the Dean of Students Office for disciplinary action. If there is sufficient proof of academic dishonesty, I will not hesitate to fail the student from the course and even move forward with charges of academic dishonesty. In other words, write your own paper and give credit where credit is do.

DISABILITIES

Students are encouraged to meet with the Office of the ADA and inform me at the beginning of the course if adaptations/accommodations are believed to be necessary due to a disability. You are also encouraged to notify me of the need for special assistance in the event of an emergency evacuation.

CLASS SCHEDULE

Aug 30, Introduction

Sept 1, Lecture: Disasters & development;

Readings: At Risk Chpt 1, 2;

Sept 6, Lecture: DRC’s fieldwork on the Indian Ocean tsunami,

Video project instructions

Readings: Mapping Chpt 1, 2

Sept 8, Discussion: Assessing vulnerability

Readings: Mapping Chpt 13;

Case studies At Risk Chpt 4-8

Sept 13, Lecture: Social Vulnerability and Capacities

Readings: Mapping Chpt 9

Anderson/Woodrow;

At Risk Chpt 3

Sept 15, Work groups Pick topics,

Proposal assignment handout;

Work group on Anderson/Woodrow assignment with case study

Sept 20, Lecture: Literature reviews

Age

Sept 22, DRC Library Library introduction: meet at 87 E. Main Street

Sept 27, Lecture Gender

Readings: Mapping Chpt 12;

Enarson

Sept 29, Small group Instructions for final papers

Proposals due

Small group work to discuss video plan

Oct 4, Discussion, Race/ethnicity,

Signed form due indicating you know how to edit video footage

Readings: Fothergill’s Race, Ethnicity & Disasters

http://www.blackwell-synergy.com/doi/abs/10.1111/1467-7717.00111?cookieSet=1

Oct 6, Film

Oct 11, Lecture Transient populations; language

Oct 13, Discussion Ability

Readings: Parr, Arnold. 1997. “Disasters And Human Rights Of Persons With Disabilities: A Case For An Ethical Disaster Mitigation Policy.” Australian Journal of Emergency Management (Summer): 2-4 (handout)

Wisner, Ben. 2002. ”Disability And Disaster: Victimhood And Agency In Earthquake Risk Reduction.” In C. Rodrigue and E. Rovai (eds.), Earthquakes. London: Routledge. Available on-line through RADIX: http://online.northumbria.ac.uk/geography_research/radix/resources/disability_and_disaster_wisner.doc

Oct 18, Exam

Oct 20, Lecture Class, livelihood, business, industries

Readings (ITDG)

Oct 25, Lecture Development

Readings Fred Cuny

Oct 27, Discussion Development:

Readings: Dyne’s Exploring the Horizons of Disaster Research http://www.colorado.edu/hazards/o/mar04/mar04a.html

Mapping Chpt 3, 4, 7

Nov 1, Small group

Nov 3, Discussion Development

Readings: Handout Social Vulnerability in the City

Nov 8, Lecture Social Capital, Social networks

Readings: Mapping Chpt10

"Demographics and emergency management: knowing your stakeholders" Norman Ferrier http://www.ema.gov.au/agd/ema/emaInternet.nsf/Page/RWP04A6267272F72D84CA256C75007F2F06?OpenDocument

Nov 10, Discussion Action for Reduction

Readings: At Risk; Part III

Nov 15, Small group

Nov 17, Lecture Sustainable livelihoods;

Community based participation

Video projects due for Groups 1 & 2

Nov 22, Discussion Sustainable livelihoods

Readings: Mapping Chpt8

Nov 29, Discussion Policy Implications: Local, National, Regional, and Global

Video projects due for Groups 3 & 4

Dec 1, Screening

Dec 6, Screenings Final papers due (but will be accepted earlier)

OTHER IMPORTANT DATES:

August 30: First Class

September 13: Last day to register or to add course for Spring 2005. After this date there is a tuition and change-fee charge, and a grade of "W" is recorded for course withdrawal. Last day for textbook refunds.

September 15: Proposal instructions handed out, Paper topics picked

September 22 DRC library tour 87 E. Main Street.

September 29: Proposals due

October 4: Signed form due indicating you know how to edit video footage

October 18: Exam

October 25: Last day to change registration or withdraw from a course without academic penalty and dean’s approval. This includes changing registration to a pass/fail.

November 17: Video projects due for Groups 1 & 2

November 29: Video projects due for Groups 3 & 4

December 6: Last class, Final papers due

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