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TYPHOON HAIYAN
(2)
answer(s).
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Item
1
ID:
146648
ASEAN's norm adherence and its unintended consequences in HADR and SAR operations
/ Loh, Dylan Ming Hui
Loh, Dylan Ming Hui
Journal Article
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Summary/Abstract
This paper examines the effects and expressions of norm compliance in Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) and the ‘unintended consequences’ arising from such compliance. This is done through an analysis of ASEAN's responses in humanitarian assistance and disaster relief (HADR) efforts in the Typhoon Haiyan disaster and in the search for missing flight MH370. It argues that the lethargic ASEAN responses in the Haiyan disaster and the uncoordinated search efforts for missing flight MH370 are unintended outcomes arising from norm adherence specifically to the norms of ‘respect for sovereignty’ and ‘consensual decision-making’ which constrained the range of ASEAN responses.
Key Words
HADR
;
Asean Norms
;
Typhoon Haiyan
;
MH370
;
SAR Operations
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2
ID:
168480
Citizen aid, social media and brokerage after disaster
/ McKay, Deirdre
Mckay, Deirdre
Journal Article
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Summary/Abstract
In a crisis, aid providers deliver humanitarian relief across a hierarchy of organisations where influence and capacity map to their scale of operations. On the front lines of crises, ‘citizen aid’ is what small, local and informal groups offer to fellow citizens. These citizen aid groups are well-networked in place and tend to work through longstanding personal relationships. In the Philippines, citizen aid groups frequently support their activities by documenting their work with photos of beneficiaries to solicit donations from within the country and around the world across social media platforms. This paper builds on recent debates on brokerage through a case study of citizen aid in the relief effort after Typhoon Haiyan (2013–2017). Using this case-study approach, we demonstrate how social media has produced novel forms of brokerage shaped by circulating images online. This new kind of brokerage involves a layered network of brokers that both shapes citizen aid efforts and creates new channels for localising aid, enhancing the control of citizen groups in the Global South over aid.
Key Words
Humanitarian Aid
;
Social Media
;
Brokerage
;
Typhoon Haiyan
;
Citizen Aid
;
Post-Disaster Relief
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