19 research outputs found

    Earthquakes, Volcanoes and God: Comparative Perspectives from Christianity and Islam

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    This paper asserts that both Christian and Islamic traditions of faith affect the ways in which people both try to make sense of, and respond to, disasters. This contention is supported by the results of empirical research, which demonstrates that differing Islamic and Christian perspectives on human suffering caused by disasters are neither as diverse, nor are they so intractable, as is commonly supposed. Today pastoral convergence between the two traditions may also be discerned, together with a general acceptance of the policies of both State agencies and Non-Governmental Organisations (NGOs) which are concerned with hazard relief and the propagation of policies of disaster risk reduction (DRR). Indeed some important disaster relief NGOs have emerged from Islamic and Christian faith communities and are supported by charitable donations

    Sustainability and resilience in the built environment: The challenges of establishing a turquoise agenda in the UK

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    The paradigms of sustainability and resilience have had significant impacts on both research and practice in the built environment, attempting to frame ethical approaches with regards to the fragile relationships between the built, the natural and the social environments. Both paradigms adopt a systems approach to the understanding of complexity, highlighting the importance of long-term effects and of taking a holistic view of highly interconnected variables. However, a careful look at policies - and their underlying bodies of knowledge - shows that these paradigms sometimes emphasize different priorities and relationships thereby increasing complexity in policy and decision-making. This paper examinesthe tensions and complexities that appear between the ‘green’ (sustainability) and ‘blue’ (resilience) agendas through a systematic analysis of 43 policy documents issued by the United Kingdom government, and 21 interviews with influential actors in the built environment. Our analysis reveals a series of tensions that occur when the paradigms of resilience and sustainability are translated into policy instruments. Faced with complex tensions between these policy areas, decision and policy makers are prone to simplifying and ‘instrumentalising’ them into a set of normative core principles, creating different interpretations of what is considered ‘sustainable’ and ‘resilient’. Both paradigms lead stakeholders to create their own representations and meanings of the terms, drawing boundaries between the two paradigms. This raises questions as to the plausibility of the aspiration of the so-called ‘turquoise’ agenda in the UK within which both paradigms are seen to interact in mutually supportive ways.</p
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