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Civil society mobilisation after Cyclone Tracy, Darwin 1974

journal contribution
posted on 2024-11-02, 15:55 authored by John HandmerJohn Handmer, Pascale Maynard
Major disasters challenge or exceed the capacity of the official emergency management sector to provide needed rescue services, support and relief. Emergency services in most jurisdictions do not have the surge capacity for unusual or extreme events without drawing on other jurisdictions or local people from outside the formal emergency management organisations. In such circumstances, those in the affected area need to organise themselves and make maximum use of local resources to cope with the immediate aftermath of impact. To find the required surge capacity, this suggests a whole of society response with the official system working with the capacities of people, commerce and organisations outside the emergency sector. An example is provided by the destruction of the northern Australian capital city of Darwin by Cyclone Tracy in December 1974. Informal volunteering and emergent leadership in Darwin and across Australia were critical to the immediate response and relief. Volunteering was widespread and worked well alongside official emergency management. With today’s information and communication technologies and a strong national resilience narrative, we would expect to do at least as well. However, governments now exercise much more control over civil society. We examine the implications for surge capacity and adaptability.

History

Journal

Environmental Hazards

Volume

20

Issue

1

Start page

23

End page

44

Total pages

22

Publisher

Taylor and Francis

Place published

United Kingdom

Language

English

Copyright

© 2020 Informa UK Limited, trading as Taylor & Francis Group.

Former Identifier

2006104202

Esploro creation date

2022-11-25

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